W. d. Bair
June 1 8, 1979
Page 7

normal conditions what percent of the food is assumed to
be important, or was the definition of "normal" left
undefined and/or vague.

The authors noted that they believed

(even before the survey was conducted) that the diet estimates
previously used were too high.

What precautions were taken

to ensure that their preconceived notions did not bias the

way questions were asked of the Enewetak people so that
biased responses were not obtained?

Their survey results

may truly reflect actual diet conditions, but they must be
able to document that such is the case!
What exactly is a maximum annual dose rate?

24.

It should be

explicitly defined.

25.

Throughout the Results section the authors talk in terms
of predicted dose rates.

I would prefer that they talk

instead in terms of projected or estimated doses.

Also,

nowhere do they indicate how "less-than" soil concentrations
were handled in computing average soil concentrations.
Concerning the dose tables, 2 rather than 3 significant
digits is all that can be justified.

Actually, 1 significant

digit is probably all we can really feel comfortable with.
26.

p. 15, Line 7

The childs entire diet intake cannot come from Engebi under
“normal” conditions since the latter assumes imported foods
are available.

2/.

Tables 19-44

Condense into only one or two tables or graphs.
wasted paper in present format.

Too much

It's also hard to get a

quick idea of the overall picture with the present format.

28.

Tables 47-50

Need "error limits" on doses.

29.

p. 16

Do these maximum annual doses take into account the skewed
nature of the soil data, i.e., was lognormal data assumed?

30.

p. 17;

How was the 10 month figure determined?

Table 49.

24000 mrem/30 years is obviously in error (typo).

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