aCe es Fa Files May 31, 1960 a I. &. dallen, Aquatic Biologist, Environmental Sciences Branch, Division of Biology & Medicine RADIOACTIVITY IN SALMON SYMBOL: SMES:TEW BEST COPY AVAILABLE Br. Yoshio Hiyama of the University of Tokyo and the Japan Atomic Energy authority called and asked if I could ueet him dewntown to discuss a problem he did not wish to write about or talk about over the telephone. I went down om Memorial Day and he told me that they had a Japee-wide progras fer collection of various food samples for radioactivity. One such sample was 12 saluoe taken from a comuexcial fishing vessel is the Japan ses. Aithough the stated place ef collection was off of South Korea, Dr. Hiyama said that their fishing vessels sometines fished in the area which was restricted by the Russiaus and north of the etated lecation. The twelve salmon were measured by their gross beta counter ami found to contain ‘much’ sore radioactivity than eny other food item he had ever measured, inciuding the tuna following “Mike’ shot in 1954. The species of salmon is one that spends a xrelatively short time et sea and its migration pattern is well cnown from tagging. We believes chat the specimens must have come down a Russian river and become contaninated by excessive radioactivity from some wmikeown Russian source. The activity was mainly from short lived fectopes aad as yet they were unidentified. Mis cheaists are analyzing the asked saxples for specific isotopes at present. He was very cemcerned that so official or published information be given out since it might reselt fim tremendous ioss of business by salmon industries similar to the tuma scare in 1954. fhe actual levels of radioactivity were net directly dangerous when averaged out as a ‘population’ dese. US DOE ARCHIVES 326 U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION RG _D0EHISTORIAN (DBM) Collec. Box > 3379 Folder 7% 1/32 2 7 . DO*® ARCHIVES

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