in this manner by as much as a thousand fold.

Thus, for example, one

‘gram of plankton could contain a thousand times as much radioactivity
as a gram of sea water adjacent to it.

The radioactivity from these

plankton which form a portion of fish diet tends to concentrate in the
liver of the fish, and, if sufficiently high leveis of contamination
are encountered, could have a marked effect upon the ecology of an
ocean ares.

However, the low level from world-wide contamination has

not been identified to date in undersea life at great distances from
the weapon test sites.

The fish in close-in fall-out ereas have been

shown to absorb radioactivity to varying degrees, one mechanism being
the method of contamination just discussed.

The slow world-wide fall-out of radioactive fission products involves all land and seaareas.

Rain, as previously mentioned, scavenges

small particles in the atmosphere quite efficiently.

Thus, on a world-

wide basis, arable land should exhibit higher concentrations of fission

product radioactivity than desert lands.

The New York Operations office

has studied this problem as have the Lamont Laboratories of Columbia
University and the Institute of Nuclear Studies of the University of
Chicago.

These studies have been reported under the project code name

SUNSHINE and in general are classified SECRET.

The data confirm the

hypothesis that areas of high rainfall have considerably more artificial
radioactivity in the soil than areas of low rainfall.
The SUNSHINE data are considered reliable, but ultimate quantitative interpretations will have to await long-term animal experiments.
The biological discussion of the SUNSHINE data will be included in the
section on biological effects.

Suffice it to say here that rainwater,

ground water, soil, foods, and animal and human bones have been subjected to radiochemical analysis.

All indications tend to substantiate

the fact that there is a low level of world-wide contamination from the
amount of fissionable material that has been fissioned in nuclear
weapons to date.

To return to the question of the land surface involved, the RAND

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