RADIATION STANDARDS, INCLUDING FALLOUT Dee oe RE axe ech dy 2G24 stag ol APTS tetetaysesny esate BST kde 75 is a discrepancy between the AEC estimate and that observed. However, in this case, the explanation lies not in incomplete ocean sampling, because you can double the value of 0.2 and not bring the inventory even close to 2.5 megacuries. It is either the fact that there has not been as much added by the Soviet test, or the following explanation. Placard 4 is a plot in which the North Pole lies on the left end of the horizontal axis, the Equator is at the zero degree point and extends on the right to 10° in the Southern Hemisphere. The vertical axis is altitude in thousandsof feet. The heavy black line without a numerical label, identified as “tropopause,” represents the separation between the troposphere below and the stratosphere above. It has a break at approximately 30° N. The solid and dashed Hinesare isolines of concentration of strontium 90 of Soviet 1961 debris. The highest concentration is at about 50,000 feet close to the North Pole. Near the Equator the values decrease and rise to higher altitudes. But there has been considerable mixing southward along the meridian, at which the stratospheric sampling has taken place, from the point of injection at 75° N. virtually to the Equator.In fact, a month or so later some short-lived isotopes from the Soviet tests were observed in the stratosphere of southern Australia. The inventory calculations above were based on this cross section. One can, in very straightforward fashion, determine the amount of Soviet 1961 strontium 90 in the atmosphere, assuming the concentration is the same around the circle of latitude as at the meridian of sampling. Above 60,000 feet, the concentrations become smaller, from the order of a hundred to less than 10 units. The dash lines reflect the lack of complete data. It looks like the aircraft are over the tops of the nuclear clouds at. 70,000 feet. However, at two points, San Angelo, Tex., and Thule, Greenland, we have obtained some balloon measurements. At San Angelo, Tex., where air is filtered and equipment carried on a very large plastic balloon, a large peak was found at 60,000 feet, corresponding to the aircraft maximum at the same altitude. This is indicated by the horizontal line at 60,000 feet on the placard at San Angelo, Tex. . At higher altitudes, the horizontal lines become shorter as the concentration decreases, At higher altitudes, the concentrations or the lengths of the horizontal lines increase in length again. Thereis apparently another cloud at higher altitudes above 70,000 feet. The same picture, more orless, takes place at Thule, Greenland, where the peak concentration is slightly higher than that identified by the Stardust aircraft flights but decreases at about 80,000 feet and then increases again at 90,000 or 100,000 feet. It is quite apparent, I think, that someof the larger Soviet weapons went to much higheraltitudes than 70,000 feet, the ceiling of the Stardust aircraft sampling. For this reason, a satisfactory inventory of the total Soviet debris is unavailable. The next subject is the geographical distribution of strontium 90 fallout on placard 5. This is a map showingthe fallout in mid-1960in millicuries of strontium 90 per square mile. Nowoneis discussing thousandths of a curie of strontium 90 dispersed over a square mile of 86853 O—62—pt. 1——6 TRceGcRR

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