- 21 - is very low in calcium and as a result grows grasses of high radiostrontium content. Of course, it is clear that Tertilization with calcium will immediately relieve this di:ficulty, but in the absence of such fertilization, the questica is: How serious is the effect of calciun deficiency in promoting strontium-90 pick-up through the food chain? As was remarked earlier, there is an averaging which occurs in food distribution systems and calcium deficient Soils are naturally rather poor producers and as a consequence the weight of the food so produced is less than for a good well fertilized, well balanced soil. This factor reduces the flow into the general food system of material of exception- ally high strontium-990 content. It therefore will probably be sufficient to consider the radiostrontium of milk, since milk is the main source of calcium, in order to test for the radiostrontium content of the food in given areas. Direct measurements have shown that a factor of five encompasses the total variation due to all factors including calcium deficiencies in acid scils. The general intake must depend on the food distribution pattern and the relatively small fluctuation in milk contents must reflect this. The number of individuals who rely totally on the food output of soil of very low calcium content is very small indeed, but it.must be true that these individuais if they grew up on such a provincial, isolated farm would have as much as ten to 50 times the normal average strontium-90 content. The normal calcium concentration in soils in the United States is about 20 grams per square foot for the top 2.5 inches and about the poorest Soil known has about 0.4 gram available calcium per square foot for the top 2.5 inches--a deficiency factor of 50. It is clear from a detailed examination made by the author for people living in calcium deficient areas with normal food distribution patterns, that a factor of 5 is about as large an effect as can be expected from a fifty-fold deficiency of calcium in the soil. The food from outside of the calcium deficient area reduces by a factor of about ten the increase in strontium-90 pick-up rate which would be expected from the calcium deficiency in the soil if people lived ee rn ri 5 m1 F k Fa Ri 4 i m4 re py “ pe pee Fa (more)

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