37
sampling, extruding and sectioning processes.

Core sections and surface

samples were weighea frozen (wet) and again after 1-2 weeks of drying at 105 C.

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Serer ty npr OT TOE TEEN Ont OPN Eres

Dried surface sediments were divided, as is illustrated by the flow diacram in Fig. 6, so that the chemical analysis could proceed independently of
radiometric analysis; also, representative samples remained from each station
so that sediment particle size or cther types of analyses could be made at a

later date.

Splitting of the dried sediments was done by removing aliquots

from a well-mixed sample which was distributed as evenly as possible over the
side of a large beaker tilted horizontally.

The size of the aliquots removed

for homogenization by grinding was determined by the degree to which a large

te

variation in sediment particle sizes were present.

Many samples were well

sorted, either because they consisted predominantly (or entirely) of finely
crusned crater debris or natural’y fine-grained materials.

Some samples,

however, were poorly sorted and contained a large proportion of coarse material.

Typically, from 5 to 15 grams of material was removed for grinding,

depending on the amount which was estimated necessary to obtain an aliquot
representative of particle sizes in the whole sample.
Twenty-five to seventy-five gram aliquots of the remaining surface sediments or core sections were similarly prepared in either 2" x 1” or 2" x 1/2"

cylindrical polyvinyl chloride containers for gamma spectrum analysis. Sediments not encapsulated for gamma-spectrum analysis, or ground up for other
analyses were stored as excess samples.
4.1-1

Total alpha measurements
Measurements of the total alpha radioactivity in aliquots of

ground surface sediments were made early in the course of the research for the
purpose of surveying the concentrations and determining the weight of each
rere

sediment sample required for the subsequent plutonium analysis.

Plutonium

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