3. It is recognized that the people of Enjebi have a strong desire to
return to live on that island.

The island contains three ground zero

locations from nuclear tests and was within about 3 miles of the
Mike event that had a total yield of about 10 Megatons. According to
the survey results presented in NV-140, Enjebi was the most heavily
contaminated of the larger islands in the Atoll.

The Task Group has

been unable to determine any way in which radiation exposures can be
brought within the acceptable criteria,

that is both reliable and

feasible, in order to resettle Enjebi at the same time as islands
in the south of the Atoll.

It is reasonable to expect that one day

the island can be resettled.
a.

There appear to be two possible approaches:

Soil removal followed by studies with test plantings to determine
whether exposure for Enjebi residents would be within acceptable
criteria.

Db.

Conduct of studies using test plantings to determine when exposures
would be within acceptable criteria but no soil removed.

In either case, housing construction and planting of subsistence and
commercial crops would be deferred until research with test plantings

showed acceptably low levels of radioactivity.

The Task Group

recommends the second approach as one having minimal adverse impact

on the island environment.
4, The research program in 3 above should also include a
determination of radioactivity levels in coconut and other food crops
produced on PEARL, CLARA, ALICE, and BELLE.

YVONNE should also

be included after removal of plutonium contaminated soil.
5. All radioactive scrap metal and contaminated debris identified during
the Holmes and Narver Engineering Survey should be removed.

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If

Select target paragraph3