Altogether about 80 personnel were utilized ‘in activities
devoted to safety.
Radiological Surveillance
Radiological safety (Rad-Safe) was a separate Task Unit

within the Joint Task Force organization. Rad-Safe responsibilities included procuring, storing, and issuing Rad-Safe supplies and equipment, instrument maintenance, issuance and

processing of film badges, maintenance of personnel radiation
exposure records, supervision of monitoring, decontamination,
waste disposal activities, procurement and distribution of high
density goggles, and other activities as indicated by the potential hazards of the situation. The Rad-Safe Branch contained
an Off-Site Surveillance Section. Personnel from this section
participated in monitoring at off-site populated islands in the
vicinity of the test area and periodically collected water and
food samples.

Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Sandia Corporation) and
representatives of the U.S. Weather Bureau was organized

to advise the Commander of the Joint Task Force and the
Scientific Deputy.

Pre-shot computations were made for each

detonation. These computations included 12 and 24 hour
trajectory forecasts based on winds from the surface to 40,000
feet. A specified radiation exclusion area was then declared

to include any possible local fallout.

Daily soundings were

made to 100,000 feet giving added information that was helpful
in correlating observed cloud stabilization and movement with
predicted shot-time trajectories. Where applicable, other
weapons phenomena were considered such as blast pressures,

and possible eye injuries from the prompt thermal radiation.

Cloud tracking aircraft made and maintained contact for
several hours with the radioactive cloud following each event

Aircraft Monitoring
Aircraft were used to monitor the cloud of airborne radio-

conducted in the lower atmosphere. Timely information on
cloud movement, top and base altitudes were obtainedfor use of
advisory reports regarding opening of commercial air lanes
through or near the announced danger area. There was no
evidence that any commercial aircraft encountered any of
these radioactive clouds.

Environmental Safety

Off-Site Monitoring

activity during early times after detonation and to track the
cloud periodically over a period of two or three days.
During Operation Dominic (1962) there were 35 nuclear detonations above the Pacific Ocean near Christmas and Johnston
Islands. The explosive yields of these devices ranged from low
kiloton into the megaton range in TNT equivalent. The height
of burst for each detonation wassufficient to negate local radioactive fallout. The devices were delivered to the point of
detonation by either manned aircraft or by surface-to-air missiles. In addition to the atmospheric tests, there was one
underwater test of a low yield nuclear device detonated in the

Eastern Pacific Ocean several hundred miles from the closest

land area.

Essentially all the radioactive fission products

produced by this test were deposited in the ocean and were soon
dispersed and diluted to concentrations which were of nosignificant biological hazard to man or marinelife.
All nuclear events at Christmas Island were detonations
of devices released from manned aircraft. These bursts occurred over water and were planned for execution underfavorable atmospherie conditions to minimize the likelihcod of
contamination of land surfaces. In addition, following each

event, ground and aerial monitors surveyed the island to determine whether any radioactive rain-out occurred.

A Hazards Evaluation Unit composedof scientific personnel

of contractor laboratories (Lawrence Radiation Laboratory,
Aa

The off-site monitoring program during Operation Dominic
was under the cognizance of the U.S. Public Health Service,
USPHS personnel being assigned to JTF-8 during the operational phase. A radiological surveillance of a network of 19
monitoring stations was maintained on populated islands

within a 2,000 mile radius of Christmas Island.

Air samples

were collected on populated islands out to about 1,000 miles

from the test zone.

Samples of soil, vegetation, fruits, water

and marine life were collected on the populated islands of the

area before testing began and repeated sampling was made
after the testing period to determine whether changes in the
level of radioactivity had occurred in the area.
The 19 sampling stations were divided into (1) primary stations, (2) secondary stations, and (3) background stations. The
primary stations (Christmas, Fanning and Washington) were

manned by USPHS officers with equipment and sampling tech-

niques to document all forms of environmental radioactivity.
The secondary stations (Canton, Malden, Penrhyn/Tongareva,
Palmyra, Midway, Johnston Island and French Frigate Shoals)

were outside the danger area and were designed to document
air concentration and external radiation background. These
stations were operated with the assistance of Task Force Project Groups and Weather Groups.

Background stations on Tu-

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