surface. The degree of separation of the fine striations seems to affeci the differentiation of the dark and light annular bands revealing age: the stria+ tions are finer and more closely packed (about 15 , between centers) in the dark, relatively opaque areas of Fig. ! than in the lighter, more translucent regions (25 ,). Probablythe light areas are deposited during seasons of warmest water temperature. 29° to 30°C, which occur at Bikini Atoll from August to October, inclusive (8). Possibly a cool summer accounts for the lack of a distinct light area on the inside of the shell in Fig. | even though it was collected on 22 August. Tridacna gigas grows fast compared to other molluscs. Wilbur and Jodrey (//) estimated from uptake of Cat? that the shell of the oyster, a relatively fast-growing mollusc, increased in weight about 1 g per 70 cm* of surface per month. The annual increment in thickness of the giant clam shell under consideration was approximately | cm. With a shell density of 2.75 this would yield (1.0) (70) (2.75)/12 ='16 grams per 70 cm’ per month, or 16 times the growth rate of the oyster. Annular bands on the onty other specimen (/2) of T. gigas sectioned to date in this laboratory indicate growth approximately 1.5 times as fast, to a length of 55 cm in only 6 years. Such rapid growth, where length increased by 5 to 8 cm per year, or by 5O cm or more in from 6 to 9 years, probably Fig. | (above). Transverse section, 6 mm in thickness. of 7ridacna gigas shell near the umbo. (Top) Basal portion to a scale 2.5 times the lower figure. showing by stippled lines the positions of the layers of radioactivity traced from the radioautograph (P. indicates the pallial mark). (Bottom) Entire section. Fig. 2 (above right). Radioauutograph of basal portion of section of shell of Tridacna gigas shown in Fig. 1. Retouching was limited to the dotted lines indicating the outlines of shell and eroded areas. The two tight undulating Iines originating near the umbo resulted from the beta activity of Sr” presumed to have been deposited in 1956 and [9S8. respectively. Radioactivity ts abso evident tn the umbonat cleft and elewhere on the outer surface as well as tn the eroded spaces. The white Spot left of center resulted from Ca’ mixed to label the section Sf (see Fig. with 4 big. 3 right). Composite photomicrograph of section ground to a thickness of 1% to 20 ua he position indicated by dashes on the tight (top). Length and width of section, 44 by 2 Hintious strip as divided for convenience into farting swith the outside of the dicates the pallial marke. the ink used 1). shell at the thin) transverse Removed trom side of Fig 1, mm The confour columns upper deft €P ine gives the giant clam the distinction of being the fastest growing of bivalves. In order to identify the radionuclides responsibile for the lines on the radioautographs, a strip about 7 mm wide along the 1958 line of radioactivity was bandsawed and chipped from the shell section shown in Fig. 1. top. The broken pieces of this excised strip. weighing 14 gs. yielded 8 net counts per minute in a low-level, anticoincidence gross beta counter of 0.4 geometry with a background of 0.8 count per minute. There was no detectable peak above background even after 3900 minutes of counting on a 256-channel gamma spectrometer with a 7.6-cm sodium iodide crystal detector. The material was finally analyzed for Sro-Y°", considered the most likely radionuclides

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