410365 QUALITATIVE DISTRIBUTION OF RADIONUCLIDES AT RONGELAP ATOLL tirely dependent on cisterns as a source of water. Rainfall in this area is comparativeiy iow and the islets small, so that there is not a wei!-deve! oped fresh water lens. There is, however. some potab': water in wells at Rongelap and Eniwetok Islets. E. BE. HELD cat ry of Rad tion 2 odass te tte The native style wattle and palm frond build- ot aad tata Seattle. Washinueton In March. 1958. a radioeculogical study of 1. Ate 4 wes instituted iw here nest of the bi..s.on of Bivlowy and Medicine. U. 3. Atomic kiuer.; Commassi:a (AEC). This report wili be con- cerned with generalizations regaraing the distribution of radionuclides at the atoll in the fall of ivoy. some five vears after contamination with radioactive failout. norgedap Ato!l was accidentally on «.ren Ll. contaminated i954, with radioa.tive fallout trom a the: onuclear device detonated at Bikini: Atoll some SC a..es to the west. Gamma radiation dose rates at Rongelap or D* | ‘detonation * «ae day) ranyed trom 3.5 roentgens per hour ut the southern islets wi ow atoll tu 55 roentyens per hour at the nor‘hern .slets (Dunning, 1957). Eighty-two natives resid'sg on Rongela) Island, in the south. were evac~ uated and did not return until June, 1957. At that time the returning populatiun approached 300 in Rhumoer but since appears to have stabilized at 230. Several radiologicai ane viological surveys, primarily of a monitoring nature. were conducted rrom the time of the first contamination until 1958 (Dunning, 1957). Ouring this time the gamma radiation dose rates over iand areas declined at approximately the rate predicted for mixed fission prowucts by Miller and . eb (.958). Slight rises in. nma dose rate were -nserved in 1956 and 1958. resu ‘ing from tests conducted during these years. However, the total contribution of radionuclides from these subseqcent fallouts amounted to a frac- tton of one per cent of the amount from the 1954 faliout. songelap Atoll is ierated in the Marshall Isiands, in the Central Paci‘... Ocean. at about 119 North. It is a typical atull with a lagoon area of 2h square miles and iboct 1&O-tcot average depth The emergent lan. grea is about three square miles ana is made up wf #: small islets rang..¢ in size from a fract um of an acre tu the largest :sland, Rereelap, which is about tour miles long and onehalf rile acruss at 1:8 widest point. There is one sma!i isl-t on the western reef ang ihe remaincer are strung along the northern, eastern and southern reefs, fhe 1siets on the “.cthernm reef are not ag well cevelopeu as those to ‘be engt and south. The waters of the lagoon are ess. ntial!y isothermal (Robinson. 1954). The circ.’.t1on, generated by the northeast trade winds, 1S ++ 4 east to west at the surface with a returning bottom currest (Von Arx. 1954). The estimated mae ug renewal of water in the lagoon is about Tavs The parent material of both 4 14s and the la~ weco Det om is primarily calcium zrbonat: origiwees ma:niy from coralli-:s algae. corals and ‘watt viera There .* also some accumulaticr of Mitr oo Tf .m ve So. s “e naltve: of Lhe ares e Mierone ions K.oeature eS aamtted 2 oeuristy of prowuets foo Ue vbay SiePibacapt sport ws cops: About wif o¢* the toud conSumed af the or. sens ome 15 vmporte : Fisch and other “arine crcsanisms are eater Set imese sources ura aot exploited a= nulh es tie, cou a te The fongelapese are almost en1 feed ints ave been rtepiaced ‘y flywood 24° . .ni num structures built to Rongelapese specifications by the AEC. Sanitation habits have been altered by the advent of pit toilets. The terrestrial fauna is itimited in variety The only mammal present is the small fieid rat, Rattus exulans. The most common birds are the fairy tern, cygis alba, stolidus an ck numbers on some and the noddy terns, Anous tenuirostris. which nest in large of the uninhabited islets. The reptiles are represented by skinks. geckos. and a blind snake. Land crabs are common. the most spec- tacular being Rirgus latro, tne coconut or robber crab. InsectsareFew, both in aumper of species and individuals. The most severe pest appears to be the beetle, Brontispa sp., which attacks the coconut palm. in contrast to the land areas there .5 a tremendous proliferation of both numbers and variety of organisms on the reefs and in the lagoon. example, there are over 700 species of fish. For Plankton, however, is extremely sparse and as a consequence the water ig so clear that green algae are found growing at depths of 180 feet. Since the question of the effects of radiation on the organisms inevitably arises. it might be wel] to consider it briefly before going on to the main subject. There is no doubt that the levels of radiation were of sufficient intensity to affect living organisms, However, under actual field conditions and without benefit of studv betore the addition of radiation as an ecological factor, it is difficult to do more than speculate concerning the cause of the sr2cific anomalies observed. Fosberg (1959) has accurately described the poor condition of the plants at the northern islets of Rongelap 4toll and has suggested that the primary vause of this condition is radiation. In our opinion. however, other factors, particularly edaphic factors. have probably been more important than radiation. The fact that the nitrogen content of the soils of the northern islets is lower than that of the rest of the atoll is at least circumstantial evidence that for some time there have been differences between these areas with respect to plant growth. Stone et al. (1957) have concluded from studies of Drosophila populations at Bikini, Eniweiok. Rongelap, and uncontaminated atolls that while there is evidence of genetic changes caused Ly radiation other factors mask the radiation effects In short. it is not likely that such questions will be resolve i without controlled ex- perimentation with the species involved, under varying conditions, and with an eye toward the possibility of synergistic effects. Approximately five years after fallout the long-lived fission products cesium-137 and strontium-90 are the principal radionuclides found in the land organisms. while the neutron-induced radionuclides z:nc-65, cohalt-60 and manganese-54 ur. ‘ound primarily in the marine organisms. Stil! detectable in the soil are manganese-54, iiov-55. copalt-5/. cobailt-60, zinc-65, strontium- 90. 2irconium-95, ruthenium-106 antimony-125, ‘2S1um-137, cerium-144, and europium-155. which remain .oncentrated in the upper one to two inches. wherc hischer levels of radionuclides have been present itese nuclides have been reported in a wide variety, or organisms. It is likely that most of trese cadionuclides are actually sresent ia most if BEST COPY AVAILABLE Manian ene Dedinacnlnoy edited hv Schulez and Klement, Reinhold Publishing

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