UbLLER§

(continued)

LIBBY s

picked w essentially everything that wes, and would diffuse,
and all thst..
Well, most of it, three-fourths of it is ccenn and you agree
that it'd get in the weves..

VOICE;

That three quarters of it.

LIBBY:

How than, you have inland lakes and rivers, and green shrulery,
X jast don't think very much of 14 could get back, even if...

VOIGEs

Well, could it get back to salt particles?

LIBS:

I think it's a one wey street.

WEXLER:

Well, I'm very giad that you've eliminated one possibiiity...to
your satisfaction. .

COORS :

Well, getting beck to the main problem, it's a general problem,
to find out {f there's any storage in the stratesphere.

VOICE:

That's right.

VOXCE:

You yourself beve recognised the pessibility that over a period
of time, if there were storage in the stratosphere, it would be
distributed over the whole globe, or certainly over the henisphere.
Why do we seed a big progran consisting of samples from many
pisces to find out if this is true?

I should think that one

traverse through the stratosphere with the proper instrusent
would determine once and for all if there were storage.

,

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