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ning
eanup Plan

Soil Cl
The Com mittee listed several ongoing and proposed actions to provide
formation which could improve the confidence of the dose
jdditional in
“amates and cleanup criteria for transuranics. They also indicated that

ese

might reduce surface soil concentrations and hence reduce the

rental inhalation problem, but that it was unlikely to reduce plant

uptake.

DOE SOIL CHARACTERIZATION

The DOE-ERSP characterization data for the northern islands was
forwarded to Field Commandon 27 April 1978. It covered al! transuranics,
while the EIS covered plutonium only, and it included estimates of soil
volumes to be excised under various conditions. Some of these estimates

were used in updating the Field Command time and motion studyfor the

briefing to be given at the 3-4 May 1978 conference, while others were
disregarded due to significant variances with data on hand.

The DOE characterization had taken 9 months to complete. In general,

it confirmed what had been indicated in the 1972 radiological survey, AEC

Task Group recommendations, EIS, CONPLAN, and OPLAN. Five

islands required removal of plutonium concentrations to permit their use

as planned by the dri-Enewetak: Aomon, Boken, Enjebi, Lujor, and Runit.
None of the eight case-by-case islands required any soil cleanup. Nine
other northern islands, not previously identified for soil cleanup, also had
been characterized and found with no contamination above 40 pCi/g.
DOE-ERSP’s estimates of the volumesof soil to be removed from the
four islands namedin the EIS to permit the planned use was approximately
72,000 cubic yards. The EIS estimate for those islands was 79,000 cubic
yards. The DOE-ERSP estimate for the fifth island, Enjebi, was 44,835
cubic yards to qualify it for residential use.84 These estimates were
reassuring to the planners since they indicated that volumes of soil
previously estimated to be moved would not be materially affected by the
inclusion of all transuranics, which had not been previously considered.
Regarding the time utilized for the soil characterization, it should be
noted that the advanced techniques developed by DOE-NV for this
complex task and the new equipment fabricated from research and
development components weretruly remarkable. Tofield this effort in the
distant, harsh Enewetak environment—and to put it on a paying basis
relatively quickly—was quite an achievement. Thesoil cleanup project had
been delayed, but this had been compensated for by a speedup in
contaminated debris cleanup. Since DNA had avoided making decisions
involving major resource commitments which might have proven to beilladvised, no serious harm had been doneto the overall project by the delay.

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