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APPENDIX C

BM-1175-AEC
$2-30-53
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THE ANALYTICAL METHOD
A.

Preliminary treatment of samples
Before any chemical preperation was done, most of the solid

gamples were

dried or burned in an oven or incinerator and then reduced to ashjin a mffle

furnance at 900°C. Samples treated in this way included the humaf, alfalfa,
\

cheese and milk specimens.

The Bureau of Plant Industry at Beltsville, Maryland,

processed the soil samples and sent them to us in the form of caldium oxalate.
The water samples, including the rain, snov, lake, river andJocean samples,
were filtered to remove solid material.

B.

Chemical preparation of samples
The ashed samples were dissolved in concentrated HCl and condentrated

HNO, was also added if the sample did not go into solution satisfactorily.
The residue, if any, was then filtered off, and, with the exceptidn of the
human group, strontium carrier was added to the solution, which

was then milked

with yttriun.
The alfalfa samples were still highly contaminated after the [first

milking.

Repeated ferric phosphate precipitations were made to r@move the rare

earth contaminants.

The strontium carrier which had been added wds isolated

using Harley's method, and then purified.
The soil samples in the form of calcium oxalate were dried,
oxides, dissolved in concentrated HCl, diluted with water, and

ited to
ed.

The

milking technique adopted by the Chicago group for the determinatfon of the sr”
content of various types of sample essentially consists of obtaingng an HCl
solution of the sample, adding carrier for the yttrium, separat

the yr

daughter of any sr” present in the sample by a phosphate precipifsation of the

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