162° 20°F

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(FLORA) ELUG EL AB.

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(EONA) SANIL DEFONSO

ENGEBI( JANET)

(OaISY ) COCHIT!
(CLARA) RUCH!

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MUZINSAAIKU (KATE

(BELLE) BOGOmBOGO

KIRINIAN (LUCY)

(ALICE) BOGALLUA

7

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@OKON AARARPU (MARY)
YEIRIL NANCY)
AITSU (OLIVE)
PRUJORU( PEARL}
EBERIRU (RUBY)
AOMON (SALLY)
BHJIRI (TIL OA}
ROJOA (URSULA)

CORAL HEAD (MACK)

RUNIT (YVONNE?

PHOTOTOWER loscan)

7

90°

PIIRAAL (WILMA)

if? 30'N

HW? 30'H

.

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gy

{LEROY) RIGILI

CHINIEERO
{ALVIN}
ANIYAANI
(aRUCE)
HINIMI (CLYDE)

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SOUTHWEST

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JIEROR

PASSAGE

JAPTAN (OAVIO)

DEEP

ENTRANCE
PARRY (ELMER)

(KEITH )GIRIINIAN

(JAMES) RIBAION—]

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2

3

4

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(GLENN)

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Fig. 146,

(62° #0'E

Islands (those circled) requested as village locations by the Enewetak people.

generally at or very near expected back-

Radioactivity Levels in Enewetak

ground levels; the highest levels are

pout

found in heavy vegetation at island centers

.or near ground zero sites, ' Average"

Approximately 3000 samples of

Enewetak soil were analyzed by germani-

values for islands with relatively high

um gamma-spectrascopic (Geli) and

dose levels include a broad range of values

wet-chemistry techniques to determine

for specific areas and should therefore be

the distribution of radioactive species on

used with caution,

islands inthe Atoll.

Samples were taken

rr

40

162% 10'E

!

4

A

ENIWETOK ATOLL

Select target paragraph3