614 10! r ] | | a — T h / ‘, | 1 + of ia 3 | | | 1? Zz _ I 1 fff I ee | iy ‘4 | | { j i Ij \ I ' | \ ~~” / | = | 7 i,— | \ 7 ! i = I \ | - O \. i; !|! by ! ] ‘ I | ! _ | — | p a ! 60 A | | = - i = Z Ht! t| i! 4 4 1 | 1 P \ 1 I 1 1 oS — 4 1 | ij | p | ' 1 || A! a 107? \ | boy | i z bo \ | yf a o£ - a | It | | !; ZL — | | |! \' pL } — 6 10 Dh « | £ > O ek Ss [ A yf — | Pil 80 tf ft 100 yy 120 MASS NUMBER | fy 140 jy 4 iT , ft 160 Fig. 7—Fission products in the Oct. 26, 1964, rain collected at Fayetteville, Ark. The concentrations in rain are expressed in terms of 10 atoms per liter of rain as of Oct. 16, 1964 (the date of the nuclear explosion). The vertical bars indicate the magnitude of decay of the longer lived nuclides since December 1962. REFERENCES 1. P. K. Kuroda, Radiostrontium in Rain Water, in Radiological Physics Division Semiannual Report, July through December 1957, USAEC Report ANL-5829, p. 167, Argonne National Laboratory, February 1958. 2. H. L. Hodges, Radiochemical Determination of “Sr, ®9Sr, and '4°Ba in Nuclear Debris, Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Arkansas, January 1964,

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