UPTAKE OF RADIOACTIVE NUCLIDES LL 273 The extent of environmental contamination with world-wide fallout varies both with latitude (since the majority of weapons trials have been in the Northern Hemisphere) and with climate, since fallout is deposited mainly, though not entirely, in rain. The internal dose from ingested radioactive materials is also influenced by agricultural factors and by the choice of food. The evaluation of man’s exposure to radiation from fallout is further complicated by the fact that whereas some components of the dose ntific Committee on the Effects of comprehensive estimate which has yerienced by the world population. , column 1. om cosmic rays and from terrestrial cay products of the uranium and earth’s crust. It is of interest that are received for a short period only, others will be,experienced for many years. Accordingly it is appropriate to consider not only the annual ex- the U.N. Report (2) is appreciably til recently; this is because the sig- od to a relatively constant radiation posures which have been received hitherto, but also the continuing level to which the population has been committed. Annual dose rates in the United Kingdom in the middle of 1959 are shown in Table I, column 2. That time organs. Thus, the major dose from is selected because the highest exposures from the early series of weapons trials were then experienced; the choice of the United Kingdom as an cosmic rays has but lately become ingested materials may vary widely mainly to radium and its daughter example rests partly on the availability of data and partly on the fact that it lies in a latitudinal band of relatively high deposition, Table I, column 3, based on. the U.N. Report (2), shows the estimated exposure of the world sources to different tissues is esti- er year.? Considerable variations in population from weapons tests up to 1961, averaged over the years 1954 to 2000 AD; in column 4 of the table the fraction of the dose from these tests -ent localities on the earth’s surface. 2, rises both with increasing altitude which will not be received until after 2000 AD is shown. e from the equator. The dose from Iodine 131 is not considered in Table I, since the average exposure of ust is subject to even greater varia- the population gives little indication of its significance. This nuclide is of be several times above the average concern primarily as a source of exposure of infants who consume appreciable quantities of fresh milk, partly because of the very small size of their ised by the choice of building matremely high background, values of . The internal dose from the radium thyroid glands in which it is concentrated, and partly because milk is usually the most highly contaminated food. Doses to infants from iodine 131 have on occasions been considerably higher than those from any other component of fallout; for example, towards the end of 1961 it was estimated from the of extra radiation which man has eniently divided into those resulting nent with the radioactive substances itter group will be considered first; t source. Estimates of the mean dose ‘+s where modern medical procedures year in Norwayto 58 in France (2). analysis of milk (5) that the thyroid glands of infants fed on fresh milk in the United Kingdom would have received about 170 mrems (2). Table I shows that the doses from fallout have hitherto been small relative to those from natural sources; they are less even than that from diagnostic radiology. However, since the present evidence indicates that all exposure to radiation may be deleterious, these relatively small additions to h sources as luminous watches, shoe- man’s exposure cannot be ignored. Furthermore the possibility of signifi- cantly higher levels of exposure in the future cannot be excluded. Nonethe- : information on all aspects of man’s exannexes and bibliographies covering not gactivity and the behaviour of radioactive » existence of this document makes it unverage of the literature, except on topics ration. of radiation is usually measured in rems. g the absorbed dose in rads (1 rad is 100 ye biological effectiveness) for the type of d gammaradiation is 1, that for alpha and I Te pee Serye FE less, the realization that past doses from fallout have been smaller than those accepted unknowingly by persons who move from areas of low to higher natural background, can aid a rational approach to new problems. Ingested materials are the main sources of exposure from fallout and, of these, strontium 90, caesium 137 and carbon 14 are the most important. Carbon 14, though currently delivering relatively small doses, is, because of its long half life (5570 years), a continuing source of exposure. The total dose commitment from this nuclide released by past weaponstrials should approximately equal that from all other sources of fallout (2). . ~._ TT wa emt et ete me a tne tt te et te te ep eeeee we _.

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