ESTIMATED INVENTORY OF PLUTONIUM AND URANIUM RADIONUCLIDES
FOR VEGETATION IN AGED FALLOUT AREAS

E. M. Romney, A. Wallace, and Jean Kinnear
UCLA, Laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Biology
and
R. O. Gilbert
Battelle Pacific Northwest Laboratories

ABSTRACT

This interim report is third in a series reporting data pertinent to the
contamination of vegetation by plutonium and other radionuclides in aged

fallout areas on the Nevada Test Site (NTS) and the Tonopah Test Range (TTR).
The standing biomass of vegetation estimated by nondestructive dimensional

methods varied from about 200 to 600 g/m? for the different fallout areas.
Estimated 239°240py inventories (in millicuries) for vegetation of sites

located at NTS were 0.47 for Area 5 (GMX); 0.098, 2.2, 3.8, and 6.7 for Area

ll, Sites A, B, C, and D, respectively; and 28.2 for Area 13 (Project 57).
The inventory estimates for sites at TTR were 0.39, 0.54, 2.6, and 5.7 for DT,
CS1, CS2, and CS3, respectively.
Estimated standard errors for these inventory
estimates are given in this report.
Comparisons of soil and vegetation inven-

tory estimates indicate that the standing vegetation contributes an insignifi-

cant portion of the total amount of 239°240py present in these aged fallout
areas.
The amounts of plutonium available for vegetation-transport to animals
grazing on-site would appear to be relatively small in comparison to the total

amounts deposited upon soil.

Findings indicate that most of the contaminant

found on vegetation probably is attributable to resuspendable materials.
For
those sites presently under investigation, the contamination level on vegetation
amounts, in almost all cases, to less than one-thousandth of that which is
present on soil.
It is important to recognize that the standing vegetation of
these aged fallout areas acts as a windbreak and probably reduces the amount
of contaminant that otherwise would move by resuspension should these fallout
areas ever become denuded.
‘
Inventory estimates of total uranium for vegetation varied among the different
fallout areas from about three grams for Site A in Area 11 to more than 200

grams for the large (4.7 x 10© m2) ABCD region in Area 11.

Too few samples

have been analyzed to ascertain the significance of the uranium results and
their relationship to original fallout depositions and natural background
levels at this point in time.

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