750 HARDY, RIVERA, AND CONARD the high-activity food. Only a small increase in urinary "Sr excretion was observed, and both fecal and urinary elimination rates fell off sharply within 10 days after the acute-ingestion period. By 180 days both urinary and fecal excretion of Sr had dropped to pre—high-intake levels. Through integration of the smoothed excretion-rate curves, the amounts of '""Cs and Sr excreted per 10-day interval were determined. Excretions during the 7-day acute-ingestion period and the first 10 days after the high-activity-food consumption terminated were summed over the entire 17-day period. With the assumption that the increase in the ‘°"Cs excretion rate of the subject was proportional to the increase in the normal body burdens of laboratory personnel, a back- ground correction was determined and applied to each 10-day excre- tion value. Since the "Sr excretion rate returned to preexperiment levels toward the end of the study, it was assumed that any increase in the excretion rate due to an increase in the normal “Sr diet level was not measurable. Therefore only the preexperiment Sr level was subtracted. The background-corrected cumulative excretions expressed as percent of intake are plotted against timein Figs. 3 and 4. Fifty percent of the '*"Cs ingested via the Rongelap food had been excreted in urine after 85 days, whereas only 14% had been excreted in feces during the same time. In contrast, almost 50% of the Sr dose had been excreted in feces at 10 days, whereas only 2.5% had been eliminated in urine. 80 Toro ot Poy ToT P pt tbe ft Pb CUMULATIVE EXCRETED "cs, % 70 4 60 |- URINE 7 50 -- 4 40 f- 4 30 - 4 20 |- old 0 FECES tp pd 20 40 ty 60 80 100 =61200«=6140— DAYS AFTER INGESTION ‘160 180 200 Fig. 3—Cumulative urinary and fecal excretions of "Cs following in- gestion of Rongelap food.

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