June 23, 1980
Comments on Report:

Assessment of Radiation Health Effects

of the Resettlement of Enewetak Atoll Prepared by
M. A. Bender and A. B. Brill

by
e

Karl Z. Morgan
School of Nuclear Engineering

-

Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, Georgia 30332

The following are a few brief comments on this report by M. A. Bender
and A. B. Brill dated October 12, 1979:
1.

In general, this is an excellent report.

2.

The

report

accepts

the

dose measurements

of Robinson et

al.

(1979) without providing the reader with any of the pertinent information needed so that he can judge its adequacy.

For example, there

is no breakdown of the dose between that which is external and that
which

is

internal.

There

is

no

indication whether

internal dose

values include a contribution from the actinide alpha-emitters, yet
one would expect that some of the islands have appreciable quantities
of 23954,

It is not stated, but I assume their dose values are almost

entirely from 90 “Sr + 90 “~Y and 137 Cs plus 239, u.

I would expect the

ntribution from other radionuclides to be negligibie.
3.

It seems

odd that values are given only for total body dose.

ince, as stated above, the dose is mostly from 905, + 90, | 137 Cs

and

239, u, one would expect the external dose to be primarily beta-dose
because 905, and 7°y are pure beta-emitters and 137 Cs is a strong beta

and x-ray emitter.

One wonders if the beta bremstrahlung dose was

included with the total body dose.
4.)

What would their estimate be on the skin cancer induction from

this skin dose.

UNSCEAR gives a wide variation of skin cancer co~

efficients of 2 x 10° ?
doubt

to 1.8 x 10> skin cancers per person rem.

I

these values apply here, however, because some of the beta~

radiation in this case has high energy and can penetrate } cm into

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