e.

Activity and Exposure Rate HistoryBased on Bikini Ash

i. Areal Activity and Exposure Rate from Nuclides Observed on Day
26. We used the Yamatera and Tsuzuki results to estimate BRAVO fallout activity
‘on the ground and exposure rate prior to evacuation. We accounted for the
fractionation of fission products, the presence of transuranic and activation
products observed in Bikini ash, and a buildup followed by a decline of exposure
rate.

The Japanese results,

summarized in Table 9, were used to generate the

percent of fallout beta activity represented by each nuclide in Bikini ash

(Table 12, column 2). The values in this column were based on the mean value of
the Yamatera and Tsuzuki result if two values of a nuclide's beta activity in
Bikini ash were reported. If not, only the one value was used. We calculated
the day-26 exposure rates, at 1 m above the surface of a planar source of a unit
area of Bikini ash activity (Table 12, column 3),

for each nuclide.

We based

the estimate on data of Beck (Be80) or Kocher (Ko80) and results recorded in
Table 12, columm 2. Beck recorded factors to convert activity to exposure-rate
for a number of particulate gamma-emitting fission products and for a number of
particulate activation products and residual nuclear materials on the ground, as
a result of weapons tests (Be80). By summing each nuclide's exposure rate rela~
tive to total Bikini ash activity per unit area, we estimated an exposure-rate
conversion factor for Bikini ash to be 1.12 x 107!7 c kg7! s7! Bq7! m2 (5.8 x
1073 ur ha! mcim! um). By inverting this factor and mltiplying by the fraction of each nuclide's beta activity in Bikini ash (see Table 12, columm 2), we
estimated the beta activity of each nuclide per unit area, which was relative to
a unit fallout exposure rate from Bikini ash.
Held (He65) reported a mean exposure-rate at Rongelap Island
of about 2.9 x 1079 ¢ kg7! s7! (40 mr h7!) at 26 days post-detonation. He also
reported a storm with heavy rain two weeks post-detonation (He65)}. This was
followed by a reduction in exposure rate greater than he would have expected

from decay of BRAVO fallout.

Glasstone (G162) reported a 40% reduction after 25

_days for the BRAVO exposure rate which he attributed to weathering in certain
areas of the Marshall Islands.

We estimated the reduction in exposure rate due to weathering
at Rongelap Island on the basis of the survey taken by the USS PHILIP radsafe
team. We assumed the survey at this early time post-detonation to be a measurement of unweathered fallout and assumed a decay exponent m = -1.4 from day 2.2
to day 26. This value for m was the mean value calculated for the decay of the
nuclide mixture present at Rongelap 2.2 to 26 days post-detonation, which we
based on the gamma decay of 142 nuclides tabulated in Table 13.
Specifically,

we accounted for the contribution to exposure rate from 1) the transuranic nuclides 237p and 239ND, 2) the neutron~induced nuclides, 39S and 45Ca, 3) the

day-26 fission products which had fractionated according to Japanese results
(Ya56, 1355), and 4) the fission product and transuranic product precursors ini~
tially present on
extrapolated from
greater than that
not occurred, the

day 2.2. The day~-26 value of the exposure rate which we
the measurement made by the radsafe team on day 2.2 was 18%
reported by Held. Thus, we estimated that, had the rainstorm
mean unweathered exposure rate on Rongelap on day-26 would

have been 3.4 x 1079 C kg ! s7! (47 ok hol).

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