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of plankton as determined in methane-flow counters has been reported
on the wet basis so that the

specific

pared with that of other substances.
water uniformly from
the plates.

activity of plankton may be com-

This involves attempting to drain

the plankton samples at the time of preparing

The varying water content of the planktonic organisms

causes uncertainty in evaluating the amount of wet plankton being
radioassayed.

It was shown (UWFL-53:19) that if results were based

on the amount of planktonic ash rather than on the amountof wet plankton, the variability in radioactivity of replicated tows

was reduced to

only one half the value obtained on the wet basis.
Similarly, the present data for Rongelap Atoll were more consistent on an ash than on a wet basis.

The greatest disparities between

the two values for paired tows occurred in the 1956 collections, as seen

in Table 3.

At Kabelle Island, the ratio between the two values was onl:

3.6 on the ash basis, but 8.9 on the wet basis,
only 4.3 ash basis, but 8.6 wet basis, so that

and at Rongelap Island
here,

as

at Eniwetok

Atoll, the variability is only half as great on the ash as on the wet basis
Further, the average level of activity in plankton from Ailinginae

lagoon in October 1955 was noted (UWFL-43:46) to be higher than in
Rongelap lagoon on the wet weight basis.

But if the

unit of ash weight instead of wet weight is used,

radioactivity per

the Ailinginae levels

are no higher than in Rongelap lagoon near Kabelle Island (Table 3).

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