2.

BACKGROUND -- THE RONGELAP EXPERIENCE

Rongelap Atoll is located about 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii, at
12°N, 167°E (Fig. 2 #1). It comprises more than 50 low-lying islands and

islets, total area 3.07 sq. miles, which bound a lagoon of 400 sq. miles.

The largest and by far the most important island, Rongelap, has an area
of 0.3 sq. miles.

The geological structure is that of a coral reef atoll resting on a
submerged volcanic mass. The islands are made of reef debris, primarily
of sand and gravel size, and reef organisms.
The atoll is typical in appearance,

and the islands are covered with

vegetation. However, a major factor limiting the kinds of plants that
can be grown as staples is the long dry season.

The Marshall Islands Statistical Abstract of 1986, issued by the
Republic, lists the population of the atoll as totalling 235.
Previously, it was 165 in 1973, 189 in 1967, 264 in 1958. In 1954 at the
time of the Bravo incident,

84 persons were evacuated.

fluctuations reflect the need to work elsewhere.)

Japanese and German periods of control are:

in 1920, 100 in 1906, 120 in 1860.

(These

Earlier records for

99 in 1945,

98 in 1935,

110

However, Mr. Peter Oliver, the Republic's Special Assistant for
Compact Affairs, has informed me that the Rongelap Distribution Authority
now makes per capita payments from its Nuclear Claims Fund to 1,578
individuals. Currently, these amount to $1480 per year to those exposed
to fallout in 1954, and $480 to others. The Council has also determined
that 2,277 individuals qualify for the benefits of the Section 177 Health

Care Program as a result of their ties to Rongelap.
2.1

Bravo test -- 1954
The initial event occurred on March 1,

1954, when a 17-megaton-yield

thermonuclear device was set off at Bikini Atoll, the Bravo test. The
device was 1000 times as powerful as the bombs that destroyed Nagasaki
and Hiroshima; its cloud rose 25 miles above the earth, and after 10
minutes had a diameter of 70 miles.

It had been planned that the "cloud" would be blown to the west and
north (Fig. 2.1 #1). Unexpectedly for whatever reason (Note 3), it was

blown to the east so that at about 5 hours after detonation fallout began

at Rongelap Atoll, and during the ensuing 7 hours fell in such quantities
as to suggest to Rongelapese, who had never seen snow,

that it was

snowing (Sharp & Chapman, 1957). Rather than avoiding contact, children
played in the powdery, finely granular fallout, and no particular effort
was made to separate it from food or clothing. No warning was or had
been issued by the military.

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