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September 19, 1978
The Marshall Islands Advisory Group provide the following comments and
recommendations to issues and questions raised by DNA and DOE during the
Advisory Group's visit to Enewetak in August 1978.
1.
Aomon Crypt - The 40-80-160 pCi/g guidance was not intended to apply
to special or unique situation such as the Aomon Crypt. Information
about the contents of the crypt is inadequate for the Advisory Group
to offer any useful guidance.
the crypt undisturbed.
It might have been better to have left
However, since the decision has been made
to remove the buried contaminated material, it is probably better
for Col. Bauchspies to deal with the problem than to seek advice
from other less-informed sources.
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2.
Preciseness of 40-80-160 - The 40-80-160 guidance can and should be
"met by DNA. However, DOE should be "reasonable" in its evaluation of
the cleanup relative to certification since both soil removal and
measurement methods are subject to errors of at least a few percent.
3.
4.
5.
Surface Hot Spots - Minimum Area Levels - The opinion of the Advisory
Group is that the minimum area requiring cleanup is that caused by
an IMP reading (90% of a 25 meter square area} that exceeds the
40-80-160 guidance. However, if removal of a "hot spot" brings the
IMP reading down to the appropriate limit, then it should not be
necessary to remove soil from the whole 25 meter square area.
Plowing Advisability - The Advisory Group is awaiting the results of
the plowing experiment before considering any guidance regarding plowing.
Island Average vs Maximum Values - Remedial action is based upon maximum
contamination levels. Radiological dose assessment and decisions
regarding repopulation should be based on average values for larger
environmental units such as an entire island or group of islands.
6.
Contaminated Bunker Guidance - Precise adherence to the ANSI standard
is not appropriate to the bunker situation. Since strenuous efforts
have been made to remove loose contamination and because of its location
and quantity the fixed contamination does not appear to represent a
health hazard. The preservation of a bunker as a storm refuge for
island residents is a worthwhile alternative to disposition of these
structures. Although of no apparent benefit to subsequent residents,
the off-shore Kickapoo tower anchor blocks do not appear to be a
radiation hazard and need not be removed.
7.
Subsurface Contamination - Subsurface contamination is defined as
radioactivity more than about 2 cm under the ground surface, or at a
depth not detectable by the IMP.
The Advisory Group is not yet prepared
to offer guidance. In fact some members of the Advisory Group do not
believe we should recommend criteria for subsurface contaminations
because of the uncertainty of the extent of subsurface contamination
on the atoll.
Subsurface contamination in smal] “hot spots" is apt to
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