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©
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
‘ SEATTLE, WASHINGTON 98195

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College of Fisheries
Laboratory of Radiation Ecology
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ALYZBI

October 16, 1973

Dr. Robert A. Conard
Medical Department

Brookhaven National Laboratory
Upton, New York 11973
Dear Bob:
I wish to renew the discussion about relating the medical information that

you have for the Rongelapese and that we hope yoy;swill have for the Bikini

and Eniwetok people to the environmental radiation as ‘thabitedin air, water,
soil, plant, and animal samples, including foodstutfs.

I know that you have had some discussion with Ed Held about this subject and
you and I briefly discussed the subject at Livermore at the time of the first
meeting of the Eniwetok Radiation Assessment and Review Group. Also, I
understand that perhaps the future of your program, and certainly of an
environmental program related to the medical program, is tied up with the
availability of a ship and that Roger Ray, at the request of DBER, has made
a recommendation regarding ship acquisition.
Rongelap, as well as Bikini and Eniwetok, provides a unique opportunity to
relate environmental radiation to body dose if adequate data are available.
This is an opportunity to do emperically what many people are trying to do
theoretically at many places with box models and without adequate concentration
factors or transfer coefficients. At Rongelap there is the added advantage
that part of the population was directly exposed to the March, 1954, fallout
and part were not.

Without examination of the relationship

your past

Rongelap medical data with our environmental data, I believe that the data
are adequate to provide significant information and that the effort required
for this endeavor would be justified. Since examination of the past data are
likely to reveal loop holes, perhaps more important would be the addition of
an environmental study to your medical studies at Rongelap next Spring and at
Bikini and Eniwetok later, with the specific objective of obtaining information
for relating body dose to environmental radiation. It just seems to me that
it would take much of the guesswork out of many projects now going on.
Our interest in a medical-environmental study is obvious and in order for such
a program to develop there are many pieces that need to fit together. The
first step on our part is to express our interest to you and to seek an
informal response from you about a medical-environmental study. You are
familiar with the size of the operation that Ed has had at Rongelap in the past
and how he operates, and I would anticipate a somewhat similar operation for
this study.
Your comments will be appreciated.
AHS: ah
cc: Dr. E.E. Held

With best regards, AX
Allyn H. Seymour
Director

L290

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