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define; and near the end of the survey, off the coast of
Japan.

At the present time the radioisotopes may be dis-

tributed more thoroughly in the North Pacific circulation

system than in 1954 but the levels of radioactivity would
be generally comparable.

Recent determinations have been made of Sr?? in
sea water from the western North Pacific and North Atlantic.

For the Pacific, Miyake etal. (1960) reported 2 to 5 d/m/1l
for six samples collected in 1957, 1958 and 1959.

The

values for eleven samples collected in 1956 and 1957 in the
Atlantic were about one-tenth the Pacific values and ranged

from .06 to 0.3 d/m/l (Bowen and Sugihara 1958).

Larger

values in the Pacific were not surprising because of the

contribution by local or close-in fallout from BikiniEniwetok.

Measurement of Sr9° in waters of the eastern North

Pacific have not been made; however,

there has been time for

the long-lived isotopes from local fallout at Bikini-Eniwetok
to reach the eastern Pacific by ways of the current system.
As a result of the surveys following the weapons tests at

Bikini-Eniwetok in 1954, 1956 and 1958, at is known that the
areas of contamination can be identified by measuring the
radioactivity in the water or plankton but more easily in
the plankton, and that the radioactivity moves westward from

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