-8to those in other tissues.

Differences are greatest in vis-

cera in which the amount of radioactivity is much greater than
in liver tissue the first 100 days; after this period the two

tissues decline at about the same rate.

Bone and skin fluctu-

ate about a common intermediate range between muscle and liver,
the muscle always having the least radioactivity on a per-gramwet-weight basis.

During the first 100 days all tissues show a decrease in
radioactivity of more than 90 per cent from early post-shot

levels.

By the 250th day the tissues had reached preshot lev-

els, which, at Eniwetok, were higher than normal because of
other detonations set off in previous tests.
The more or less consistent relationship of one tissue to
another during the decline of radioactivity may indicate comparatively slight differences in selective uptake in the five
tissues.

An approximation of the relationship was obtained by

dividing the total amount of radioactivity in all the samples
of the same tissue by the number of samples to give the average amount present on a per-gram-wet-weight basis for the

period of April 1954 to November 1955.

The following results

were produced:
Skin

Average uc/ke
Percent of total

of 5 tissues

11
8.3

Muscle

Bone

Liver

Viscera

1.0

9.8

29

77

0.8

7.7

22.9

60.3

The relationship varies depending on the time after shot and

Select target paragraph3