\ \ e Assessment of doses for a population living on the Atoll in its current radiological condition. e Assessment of dose reductions that might be expected due to modification of the diet. o Assessment of dose reductions that might be expected due to removal of contaminated soil. e Comparison of these dose assessment, matrices with the population dose guidelines used by the Task Group. The Enewetak Radiological Survey Report (NVO-140) contains estimates for average population doses on the Atoll for 5, 10, 30, and 70 years in its current radiological condition and for six living patterns covering a range of exposure conditions and including the pattern considered to be most representative of the Enewetak people's desired life style after they return. Can eto 7” .— Faw Swe tha eee ctw HS eee ldartan _ Se nnte nen nncimnd Pe ee ee . Tn = nAAtetan “nf lef ay Anen RS acatimatnac ee ee are made for each of these living patterns for each of the following corrective actions: e Gravel the village area and plow the village island. e Import pandanus and breadfruit from the southern islands (ALVINKEITH) for inhabitants of the northern islands. 6 Import pandanus, breadfruit, coconut and tacca from the southern islands. e Import pandanus, breadfruit, coconut, the southern islands. tacca, and domestic meat from | The estimates for 30 year whole body doses in the Survey Report are summarized in Table 1 of the Task Group report, and 30-year-bone dose estimates are summarized in Table 2. Note that the eption for "Gravel Village Area - Plow Village Island," achieves a minimal reduction in radiation -6-