162° 20°F (GENE) ve euagevany reason (HELEN) (FLORA) ELUG EL AB. BOGON (IRENE } (EONA) SANIL DEFONSO ENGEBI( JANET) (OaISY ) COCHIT! (CLARA) RUCH! _ MUZINSAAIKU (KATE (BELLE) BOGOmBOGO KIRINIAN (LUCY) (ALICE) BOGALLUA 7 (VERA) “ht rita \ @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 . gi gy {LEROY) RIGILI CHINIEERO {ALVIN} ANIYAANI (aRUCE) HINIMI (CLYDE) %q SOUTHWEST 1EROR U— JIEROR PASSAGE JAPTAN (OAVIO) DEEP ENTRANCE PARRY (ELMER) (KEITH )GIRIINIAN (JAMES) RIBAION—] i 2 3 4 Ni (GLENN) #5 WIDE PASSAGE 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