Mr. Tom McCraw

September 22, 1976
Page 7.
is not necessary when it really is necessary) is the most crucial for certi-

fication purposes. Sampling for certification should ‘also be done independently for homogeneous areas within islands.
TABLE 2

Number of Samples* Required to be 100(1-8)% Sure that
the True Proportion of Samples With Concentrations
Greater Than L is Less Than Po

B
.01
.05
.10
.20

Po

.01 .05
458 90
298 58
229 45
160 31

.10
44
29
~=—«22
16

“Based on assumption that we will find no samples with
activities greater than L.

Question 5:
~~~

For cleanup operations, is there some optimum combination
of In-Situ, soil sampling, and wet chemistry measurements
that yields the most relevant information to guide contaminated soil removal at the least cost? Can a generalized
approach be developed for use with all islands or should
guidance be derived for the known conditions on each island
requiring change?

The question of optimum combination of In-Situ and soil sampling needs
to be addressed relative to the kriging procedure. Hence, Dr. Delfiner
should be consulted on this matter. In general the optimum combination

will depend in part on how well the In-Situ and plutonium concentrations

from soil samples are correlated, and on the relative costs of the two
procedures. Gilbert and Eberhardt (1976, "An Evaluation of Double Sampling
for Estimating Plutonium Inventory in Soil", Radioecology and Energy
Resources, Proceedings of the Fourth- National Symposium on Radioecology,
Dowden, Hutchinson and Ross, Inc.) discuss the issues involved.

Select target paragraph3