eed basis of badges worn by a few individuals, supplemented by readings from badges at fixed locations on Enewetak. entitled "TG 7.2 Reference 13. (Miscellaneous)" A supplementary list of exposures is appended to the TG 7.2 portion of Fourteen of these names can be identified with the Army units listed below, but eleven cannot. These eleven have been entered in Table 58 under TG 7.2 Misc. 7126th AU, Enewetak Atoll. This organization was the successor to several Army units in Operation IVY. detachments of the 7126th. These were absorbed into the several The detachments, with the units they ab- sorbed, were: Bq and Hq Detachment Service Detachment Signal Detachment (absorbed 713lst AU Signal Detachment) Military Police Detachment Port Detachment Truck Detachment (absorbed 516th MP Service Company) (absorbed S5llth Transport Port Company) (absorbed 4th Transport Truck Company). Exposures for the whole 7126th were low, reflecting their primary operating location at Enewetak. 8600th AAU Communications Security Detachment. This unit arrived in Decem- ber 1953 and was in the Pacific Proving Ground (PPG) throughout the CASTLE Series with operating locations at Enewetak and Bikini. This group had 35 military; its exposures appear to be low and extremely uniform, indicating that most were estimates. CIC Provisional Detachment, Ft. Holabird, Maryland. assigned to TG 7.2. Pive personnel were The exposures appear to be calculated rather than actual readings. 18th MP Criminal Investigation Detachment (CID). Three warrant officers were assigned to the Aq 7126th from this organization. Their exposures appear to be identical to those of a large group of 7126th Hq personnel. 331