Reprinted from Science, January 12, 1962, Vol. 135, No. 3498, pages 102-103 407933 Copyright © 1962 by the American Association for the Advancement of Science Table 1. Results of Ce™ and Sr® analysis of different environmental samples. Date of Sample sampling Soil (depth O-10cm) Jan. 1960 Radish (root) Clams, muscle Cuttlefish (total) Crucian carp bone Mixed animal bone Mar. June Feb. Apr. Jan. 1960 1960 1960 1960 1960 Spinach (leaves) (cattle and horse) Mar. 1960 pyc /kg (wet wt.) (2670 + 59)" 49.1+ puc /g of ash 3.4 99+ 5.0 68.0 + 3.6 77 + 9.0 31 + 10 932 + 24 (130 + 20)* 21.2 + Sree Ce Sr” Cet pe 2.1 1242 10 28= 08 16+ 0.6 705.8 = §&.] 9293 + 60 (2.76 = 0.06)* (0.13 = 0.02)* 2.50 = 0,17 15 154 4.67 0.30 3.10 +08 +08 = 0.56 = 0.10 = 0.80 1.] += 0.) 1.98 += 0.16 0.65 + 0.19 0.10 + 0.038 6.937 + 0.081 30.98 + 0.20 * uuc/dried sample. ratory have revealed the presence of Ce'" in a wide variety of substances, with prominent occurrence in animal bone and clams. Environmenta! substances, including some food, obtained from Ibaraki, Japan, during January to June, 1960, have been analyzed for Sr and Ce™. Strontium-90 concentration was determined by the “Method of Analysis for Radioactive Strontium,” compiled by the Science and Technics Agency of Japan. This is a method of fuming nitric acid separation. The method of Cedetermination is of Ce’ + Pr’, but the peaks due to Prare only a few percent (3) of the at 600° to 700°C. The oxides thus obtained were dissolved in hydrochloric harvested from Hinuma Marsh. In view of the widespread occurrence of cerium- 144 in tested samples, it is assumed that the presence of this radionuclide is due to fallout. The predominantfission product contributor to total radioactivity 0.85 to 3 years after detonation is Ce(Pr) (7). Because Ce'™is abundant in fallout, it is reasonable to expect that food will be contaminated by this radio- nuclide, Recently Van Dilla (2) reported that although grazing animals ingest large amounts of Ceand other radionuclides as foliar contamination, very little Ce“ is absorbed. Investigations at our labo- The Ce™ + Pr’ spectrum would be expected to show peaks at 0.134, 0.100, and 0.071 Mev due to Ce™, and at tion of a cerium carrier solution to the sample solution, rare earths were iso- lated from the sample solution as hy- tected in clams (Schizimi, Corbicura sp.) peaks of the spectrum were consistent with that of the Ce’™-+ Pr“ standard sample. 2.18, 1.48, and 0.700 Mev due to Pr’. The peaks due to Ce™ are more than droxides. Oxalates were separated from the hydroxides and converted into oxides by ignition in an electric furnace Abstract. Small amounts of cerium-144 have been found in samples of food and animal bone obtained from Ibaraki, Japan. The highest level of radioactivity was de- (T1) well-type crystal and a 256-chan- nel pulse height analyzer. The distinct as follows: A sample solution was prepared from the ashes of about 1 kg of dried sample by hydrochloric acid ex- traction and alkaline fusion. After addi- Cerium-144 in Food with a Geiger-Miller counter. The concentration of Ce’ was determined by the chemical yield of added carrier and by comparison with a standard sample of known concentration. The cerium fractions were combined, and the gamma spectrum was determined by using a 1%4 by 2 inch Nal acid, and hydroxides were again precipitated from this solution. This procedure was repeated two or three times for removal of calcium, phosphate, and other cations except for rare earths. After being dissolved in concentrated hydrochloric acid, the hydroxides were passed through a column containing anion exchange resin equilibrated with concentrated hydrochloric acid. By this procedure iron, uranium, and plutonium are absorbed. The effluent was dis- solved in nitric acid solution (7.5M), and again passed through a column containing anion exchange resin equilibrated with nitric acid (7.544). By this step thorium is absorbed. From the effluent, rare earths were precipitated as hydroxides. Cerium was isolated from other rare earths by the iodate method and finally prepared as oxalate. The radioactivity of each sample was measured under standard conditions 60 percent of the total gamma radiation total. Observed peaks on this spectrum were 0.134, 0.100, and 0.069, Mev. With our instrument, the ordinals lower than 0.100 Mev are not in correct proportion to the energy. The gamma Tadioactivity of the cerium fraction was so low that the peaks due to Prcould not be observed. From our data, the individual peaks due to Pr’ cannot be distinguished from the Compton background. The maximum energy of beta rays, calculated from the beta-ray ab- sorption curve of the cerium by the method of Bleuler and Zunti (4), was 2.92 Mev. The decay curve of the cerium fraction showed that the halflife was 282 days. The radioactivity of the cerium fraction seems, therefore, to owe its origin to Ce™ + Pr. The Ce’ concentrations of representative samples are sum- marized in Table 1. This radionuclide Was present in every sample tested. The higher levels of Ce™ in clams, as compared with levels in the other biological samples, are not unexpected, in view of the findings of Goldberg et al. (5), who demonstrated that some marine organ-

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