3.

Rationale for Current DOE Environmental Programs in the Marshall Islands

The basic rattonale for current DOE environmental monitoring research and
dose assessment programs in the Marshall Islands is to develop a reliable data
base for estimating radiological doses to populations on the northern atolls.
This data bdse also provides a basis for information on resettlement options
at Bikini and Enewetak Atolls and provides the necessary basic research data

to allow predictions of dose beyond one point in time.
The data for the various parameters in the dose models are available as a

range of values; a mean vatue for each of the parameters is determined from
the available data.

As a result, the average dose calculated from these

parameters will represent a range of doses determined by the distribution of
the data for each of the model parameters.

Therefore,

it is possible for a

person to receive a dose which exceeds the average dose and for this reason it
is essential to develop monitoring and research programs to refine the data
base for making these dose assessments.

Programs conducted at the atolls prior to 1968 were not directed toward
developing dose assessment capabilities.

The programs had limited and

specific goals, more of general academic interest, and were not directed
toward providing an adequate data base upon which predictive dose assessments

could be made.
The surveys conducted at Enewetak in 1972-1973 and Bikini in 1975 and 1978

were the first large scale efforts designed for this purpose.

As a result of

performing the dose assessments from the data generated in these surveys,

it

was possible to : (1) define the data required to improve the dose assessments

(2) define areas of research which would delineate radionuclide cycling
mechanisms in the atoll ecosystems, and (3) define experiments to evaluate
methods of reducing either uptake of radionuclide into subsistence crops or

the soil radionuclide inventory.

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