Twenty-four adjacent standard NAEG surface soil samples (5-in. diameter
ring to a depth of 5 cm) were collected on a 6 by 4 grid (see diagram,

Each sample was
Appendix A) approximately 150 ft north of GZ at NS-201.
The <10-mesh
dried, ball-milled, and sieved through a 10-mesh screen.
fractions from all samples were composited (pooled) and mixed by kneading
for approximately 10 minutes.
The aliquoting procedure for the <10-mesh fraction proceeded as follows:
the entire mixed sample was divided into four quarters, each quarter
divided into fifths, and each fifth placed in a separate bottle.
This

gives a total of 20 bottles.

was taken
which the
according
described

One aliquot each 1, 10, 25, 50, and 100 g

from each bottle for a total of 100 aliquots.
The order in
different size aliquots were taken was systematically varied
to a "latin-square" design (Federer, 1963, Chapter 6) as
in Table Al in Appendix A.
This was done to mitigate any

confounding of concentration for a particular aliquot size with the

order in which that size aliquot was drawn from the bottle.
Each aliquot
was Ge(Li) counted for Am by REECo* personnel at Mercury, Nevada.
Counting times were 1,000 minutes or until the counting error (20
level) was <10%.
Actual counting errors were about 7%.
Special samples
were also collected in the vicinity of NS-201 for the purpose of calibrating the Ge(Li) counting system for the different size aliquots.
Details
are given in Appendix A.
The >10-mesh fraction was handled similarly to the <10-mesh fraction
except that only 10 ten-gram aliquots were analyzed for comparison with
ten-gram aliquots of the <10-mesh soil.
The average Am concentration

for the >10-mesh aliquots were 0.00748 + 0.00213 nCi/g (x + standard
error). This mean is about three orders of magnitude less than the mean

obtained for the <10-mesh soil (see next section).
RESULTS

The Am concentrations in nCi/g for the five aliquot sizes are given in
Table 1 in the form of "stem-and-leaf" displays. Figure 1 is a plot of
the data that also gives the median, arithmetic mean (x), geometric mean

(GM), standard deviation (s), standard error (SE), and coefficient of
variation (c) of the 20 aliquots for each aliquot size.
In Figure 1,
the two outer solid lines delineate the ranges of the observed data and
should not be construed as confidence limits.
The center line connects
the arithmetic mean for each aliquot size.
The stars locate the medians
and the parentheses denote the mid 50% (interquartile range) of each
data set.

It is clear that the variability between aliquots is highest for the l-~g
Size and decreases as the aliquot size increases.
The data are skewed

*Reynolds Electrical and Engineering Co.

409

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