GENERAL INTRODUCTION

1954
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Gross beta is a useful criterion of the amount of persisting radioactivity.

Plotting the logarithm of this value against the logarithm of

the time after detonation

depicts the trends of both physical decay and

of decline in radioactivity due to a combination of physical decay and

various biological and environmental factors.

The term decline as

used here indicates the trend with time in the amountof radioactivity
in successive samples of a particular type of substance at a particular
locality.

with time.

The term is appropriate because the amount usually decreases

However, the amount may increase or remain constant for a

while if there is an influx of radioactivity into the environment, so that
minor fluctuations in decline are to be expected.

In this respect de-

cline differs from physical decay, which can not remain constant or increase but can only decrease.
The three sections of this paper deal respectively with decay data
of early samples from Eniwetok Atoll, and with decline of plankton

fish samples from Rongelap Atoll.

and

All have the feature in common that

their radioactivity was derived primarily from a single, though not the
Same,

detonation rather than from two or more successive detonations.

-V-

ia

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