752 HARDY, RIVERA, AND CONARD Table 3— THE RETENTION OF 8'Csg IN RONGELAP FOOD (MEASURED BY WHOLE-BODY COUNTER AND FROM EXCRETION) AND THE RETENTION OF *Sr (MEASURED FROM EXCRETION) Days after ingestion of Rongelap food ; ‘Cs retention, ne Whole-body counter 1 2 3 4 7 07.90 57.10 99.71 05.64 o3.21 11 18 20 25 30 91.00 46.83 32 42.56 10 39 40 46 30 53 60 70 74 80 88 90 45.38 38.88 36.80 36.16 32.88 27.73 29.68 100 22.11 110 120 19,19 140 150 160 170 180 184 190 14,34 9.37 90Sr retention, ne 53.34 2.17 47.22 1.98 42.10 1.86 37.71 1.76 33.73 1.66 30.42 1.60 24,97 1.44 22.96 1.37 19.38 17.91 1.28 1,21 27.53 21,02 105 120 | Excretion 1.52 1.32 16.56 1.20 14.22 1.16 15.26 13,22 12.33 11.50 1.17 1.14 1.14 1.14 10.81 been observed by other investigators 14,16,17 was not measured in this study since the acute-ingestion period was longer than the expected half-life of the short-term component. The Sr retention curve as determined from excretion data (Fig. 6) does not describe a single exponential function as is the case with ’Cs. The whole-body retention of Sr is more closely repre- sented by a sum of exponentials ‘*:'* Or a power function.” In this

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