VARIATION OF RADIOACTIVITY IN SURFACE AIR 503 %7r/8ICg ratio observed in samples taken at 65,000 ft by the Ash Can balloon flights’: are also shown in Fig. 4. These latter data indicate a somewhat more recent time of production for debris collected at 65,000_ft during 1963-1964 than is observed in surface air. The simi- larity between the *Zr/"’Cs ratios at Chilton and Argonne, as well as the constancy of the “Mn/!%"Cs ratio in surface air at Argonne for the past year or more, point to a well-mixed stratospheric source for the bulk of surface activity. Further information regarding the cause of the change in the relative magnitude of the activity levels seen at Chilton and Argonne may be obtained from "Be measurements in surface air, the results of which are shown in Fig. 5. Reliable ‘Be concentration values were not obtained from October 1961 through mid-1963. The concentrations observed in late 1963 and into 1964 are some two to three times greater than those seen during 1959 through mid-1961. This might be due in part to decreased precipitation over the area in question. (Lower than average annual rainfall has been observed in the North Central United States for the past two or three years.) However, the major cause appears to be a difference in circulation resulting in a more rapid transport of stratospheric air to the surface. The apparent production of 'Be calculated according to the method of Cruikshank ef al.'’ in 1963-1964 was some three times greater than that during 1959--1961 Wt» «ne use or the equilibrium "Be production rates in a Stationary atmosphere pre- sented by Murayama,” the apparent age of ‘Be in surface air was ap- proximately 65 days in 1963-1964 compared with the 170 days seen previously. Hence it appears that meteorological processes have caused a more rapid transport of stratospheric debris to ground level over the North Central United States during the last few years than has previously been the case. The ™mn/%"cs ratio and activity ratios between various fission products have been used to partition the total '°"Cs observed in surface T TUTTI TTT TT PITTI TTT TTT TTT eT PTT TTT TTT TTT rer ery rer Tyre | x 3 107 = ee q a mJ oe g 7 4 = 1072 t edi Jon. Dec. Jan.— Dec. Jan.— Dec. Jan.— Dec. 1959 1960 1961 1962 Jan. — Dec. Jan. — Dec. 1963 1964 Fig. 5— “Be concentration in surface aiy at Argonne, Ill,

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