GAMMA DOSE RATES AT RONGELAP ATOLL,

1954-1963

INTRODUCTION

Rongelap Atoll, Marshall Islands, was accidentally contaminated on March 1,

1954 with radioactive fallout from a

Shermonuclear device detonated at Bikini Atoll some 80 miles
to the west.

Eighty-two natives residing on Rongelap Island

were evacuated and repatriated in June 1957.

The atoll,

its

inhabitants and its economy have been briefly characterized

(1) .

The decline of gamma dose rates resulting from the fallout is

discussed in this report.

RESULTS
Dose rates on D+ 1

Gamma dose rates at Rongelap Atoll on D + 1 (time of
detonation plus one day) were estimated to be 3.5 r per hour
at the inhabited islet of Rongelap in the south and 35 r per
hour at uninhabited Lomuilal islet in the northern part of
the atoll

(2)

, Fig. 1.

These estimates were based on extra-

polations of measurements made two days after initial fallout '7) ,
The subsequent decline of gamma dose rates, based on survey
meter readings taken three feet above the ground at Rongelap
and Kabelle islets,

is compared with the theoretical decay
L

(3)

Select target paragraph3