1.1

POT FALLOUT COLLECTIONS
The Health and Safety Laboratory (HASL), AEC, has set up a network of fallout collection

stations using stainless-steel pots with an open area of approximately 1 sq ft. The sampling

period is one month, and the pot residues are collected and are analyzed for Sr®. The original
collecting station in New York has been in operation since the beginning of 1954, and other

stations have been added where laboratory facilities are available for transfer and shipment of

the samples. This operation is carried out through the cooperation of scientists at the indi-

vidual stations.

The present network consists of 13 stations in the continental United States and 17 stations

outside the continental United States.
The data for New York City are shown in Table 1 and Fig. 1. The data for other United
States stations are given in Table 2. Data for stations outside the continental United States are
given in Table 3. (Not all the 30 stations mentioned have submitted samples in time for this

report.)

Fallout Monitoring by Other Countries, A number of other countries are reporting radiochemical analyses on pot type samples in submissions to the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation. Although several countries are now producing

reliable results, the only country, other than the United States, that has released any large

number of Sr?” analyses is the United Kingdom. Their results are reprinted in Part 4
of this report.

1.2

PRECIPITATION COLLECTIONS FOR RADIOSTRONTIUM AND RADIOBARIUM

The collection and analysis of individual rainfalls was begun at the University of Chicago
andlater at the laboratories of Nuclear Science Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pa. The latter collection, the most complete set of individual collections, was begun in February 1955. These
collections are carried out in duplicate with open vessels having an area of about 2.6 sq ft.

They are exposed continuously, and, if a period of one week occurs without rainfall, the vessels are washed out and the residue is analyzed. The cumulative value, therefore, represents
the total fallout since the beginning of the collection period.

In addition to Sr™ measurements samples taken since the end of August 1957 have also

been analyzed for Sr®™ and Ba’. These analyses can indicate the relative age of fallout debris
in a qualitative way. The ratios of the three isotopes are subject to some variation from fractionization and do not follow the theoretical ratios obtained from thermal neutron fission suf-

ficiently well to give exact ages of the radioactive material. This situation is complicated
even more by the fact that current fallout is a composite material resulting from many indi-

vidual weapons tests. The ratios, however, do give a reasonable indication as to whether a
particularly high fallout value is probably fresh tropospheric material or older stratospheric
material.

The data for both types of analyses are given for Pittsburgh in Table 4 and areplotted in
Fig. 2. The earlier Chicago rainfall samples are recorded in Table 5.

1.3

Sr® IN SOIL

Strontium-90 analyses of soils have been made for several years to study geographical
distribution and the amountof isotope available for uptake by plant systems. In both cases the
measurements can be considered to be for monitoring purposes.
In the geographical studies it is desirable to.measure all the sr* present in the soil per

unit area regardless of the depth of penetration or the composition of the soil. Such measure-

ments have been made in this country on soils from the United States and on samples collected

in other countries. With the exception of the United Kingdom, other countries are just beginning
soil analysis programs; hence foreign samples analyzed in the United States have been for the

purpose of documentation until the various countries obtain their own data.
For uptake studies it ig desirable to measure the Sr®* that is available to the plant and, in
addition, to relate this to the available calcium in the soil. Comparative studies have shown
that the results from the two techniques are not interchangeable, and the data reported here
are exclusively those designed for revealing geographical distribution.

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