te ete We Side eT ak ee oe ia tae Meh At the Largo, Md. Site listed in Table IV, a depth profile soil sample was taken directly after our measurement by Alexander of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The soil density and moisture content were also measured. The radiochemical determination of the 13’cs activity at this site and its distribution in depth should be valuable in testing our model. These results together with the radiochemistry results for the other sites measured will be compared with our spectrometric estimates of 137?cs soil concentrations as soon as the radiochemistry is completed. Measurements over Solid Rock Since solid rock is usually more homogeneous than soil, samples of the rock when analyzed y spectrometrically in the laboratory for potassium, 238uU, and 232Th should allow a reasonable comparison with our field spectrometric estimates of the activity present. Two of the sites for which data are given in Table IV, at Shaver Lake, Cal. and Courtright Reservoir, Cal., were on solid rock outcrops. Laboratory analyses of the rock were done by Smith and Wollenberg of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory (LRL).® Adams of Rice University obtained data at these sites with his field spectrometer system’® and the NYU group made measurements of the total ionization intensity in air using their thin-walled ionization chambers. Although all the results of the other groups have not yet been received, it appears that our values for potassium and 232Th concentration agree reasonably well with the analysis by LRL considering the fact that the sites geometrically were not very good half spaces, thus affecting our conversion from dose rate to concentration. Our inferred 238U concentrations disagree considerably, however, this may be due to a substantial radon migration from the rock in the field situation. It is also possible the laboratory samples may not have been representitive due to lack of homogeneity.

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