pipe and because of electrolysis which caused perforations and leakage
in copper piping, especially in salt water systems.

Table 16,4-2 shows the number of gallons of water distilled at each
site, by months.

TABLE 16,4-2, WATER PRODUCTION, SEPT. 1950-MAY 1951
Month

Eniwetok

1950

Sentember

|

Parry

Runit

Biijiri

Engebi

Japtan

October
November
December

1,772,400
1,510,200
1,750,118

—_——-

1,178,200

202,918

155,202
165,019
222,214

166,419

233,110
209,814
288,034

468,372

430,109
389,092
517,410

102,325
104,916
148,212

1951
January
February
March

1,617,004
1,617,201
2,640,121

1,220,811.
1,489,612
2,106,237

176,132
215,029
268,193

240,109
276,181
392,212

444,617
462,912
605,319

119,913
134,243
191,812

2,334,810

1,851,614

90,102

205,204

148,206

April
May

2,843,610

933,008
867,215
133,310

1,964,003

25,375

252,014

334,996

117,180

160,400

A list of water distillation, storage and distribution equipment;

by sites, is presented below:

Eniwetok (intake direct from lagoon)
Distillation

8 Cleaver-Brooks 60E, 600 gph
8 Badger, Army field, 150 gph

Fresh water storage

1 elevated steel tank, 21,000 gal
5 ground level steel tanks, 42,000 gal

Fresh water distribution

transite mains 3", 4", 6", 22,565 linear

Salt water storage

1 elevated steel tank, 42,000 gal

Salt water distribution

transite mains 4", 6", 22,000 linear feet

feet

3 electric, 1 gasoline driven 50 gpm pumps

Parsy (salt water well, twenty-four and one-half feet deep)
Distillation

Fresh water storage

4 Cleaver-Brooks 60E, 600 gph

18 auxiliary Cleaver-Brooks 17A, 150 gph

1 elevated steel tank, 21,000 gal

2 ground level steel tanks, 21,000 gal

1 concrete reservoir, 187,000 gal

Fresh water distribution

16-20

transite mains 3", 4", 9,110 linear feet

Select target paragraph3