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‘Capt. Day tests

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taminated debris — that length of
time for the radioactivity to natural‘ly reduce itself by one-half — ranges:
from five years for cobalt 60 to: 24,000 years for plutonium. Theoretical- |
ty, the amount of plutonium on Runit

Last of three articles.

By BRUCE BENSON0°32

clilvertiser Science. Writer .-. -2--

t

White: moths danced;in. and out of
a truck

“)

RUNIT ISLAND, Enewetak —

the shrubs of scnevola as

-

adioactivit v of metal debris en rou

would have to go through.10 half-

lives, or 240,600- years, befora it is
jogeled down a rutted road in low
debased to an cnvironmental fovel
gear toward ground zero. It’s a-safe.:. safe for people toJive here. ve
place for a casual visit, said Capt.

Chuck Day, but everyone nervously

ee ee, ee ee, eee, ee

kept giaticing anyway toward his
eciger counter.

Runit was the site of several nue!

clear explosions ia the U.S. weapons-

After a cle nup operation now

under way, Himited access to tne isJand will be allowed for short pertods but it will remain quarantined to
prohibit permanent residents.

testing program of the cold war. One
To ense tension aboard the truck,
felt an overwhelming desire to sud- several bad jokes are told. Fhe
troops assigned ta clean up the
denly learn more about alpha, beta
and gamma rays as the truck
radioactive debris at Enewetak are
bounced taward two craters at the
ordering a special T-shirt, says
Northern end of the ttle island.
someone. It will have a (Crom -- with
The radioactive half-lives of contwo beads — and beneath. the
Nr

te

et ent ee eet

5002bb3

C. le Feenee =

ete

mutated cr ealure will be saying:
te
“Rumit."

“Hey, Chuck, we're-just radiant .—

with enthusiasm aboul this visit.’’
saysanomer.
.
Survey parties have camped and
worked on Runt before without any
everyprotective clothing, Sut today

s

one is fitted our

in rubber boots and,
two face masks made of paper. one. 4
ever the other.
.

Runit ts the “hottest’’ of the 40 isjands in the Enewetak atoll, partly becuuse of large amounts of twisted
metal debris and partly because two

explosions blew a sfood deal of plu-

toniuimacross its landscape.

One Hawaii scientist wha camped

at ine craters for a month was callcd to the Mainland reeeathy for oa

whnrte body count of radtenuchess.
See RUNIT an Page 3-3

.

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