CONFIDENTIAL CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 OBJECTIVES - The objectives of Project 6.5 were: a. To determine the relative contaminability of widely used building construction materials exposed to the type of wet contaminant fallout which, it is believed, would result from nuclear detonations in harbors. . b. To evaluate the effectiveness of various practical decontamination techniques, particularly readily available methods, and to estimate the practicability of such techniques in the tactical amd industrial recovery of military installations. ; c. To evaluate the relative effectiveness of simple protective measures such as painting of surfaces and sealing cf joints, in reducing the contaminability and/or facilitating the decontamination of such surfaces, a. To ascertain the effect of slope on the contamination retentivity of surfaces. : e. To evaluate the effectiveness of pre-attack surface washdown countermeasures in reducing the contamina*ion of surfaces, 1.2 BACKGROUND The contaminating effects of Shot Baker at Operation CROSSROADS demonstrated that the wet contamination resulting from a shallow underwater detonation of an atomic weapon, such as in a harbor, would present a serious and complex problem of decontamination of ships as well as of buildirg structures of nearby shore installations. This trend has also been indicated in subsequent laboratory studies conducted at the Army Chemical Center and the United States Naval Radiological Defense Laboratory. However, with the exception of Operation JANGLE, which produced a dry particulate contamination, all subsequent field tests were conducted under essentially noncontamie nating conditions. No contamination-decontamination studies were conduct:-d at Operation IVY where the first thermonuclear device was detonated. Operation CASTLE provided the much needed opportunity to CONFIDENTIAL RESTRICTED DATA

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