ground is not a hazard, but if the ground is disturbed, personnel may
come into contact with the Pu and be harmed.

Persons operating in the

vicinity of the disturbed ground might either inhale resuspended Pu
directly, or become externally contaminated and susceptible to subsequent internal contamination of themselves or others.

A111 Cleanup

operations which disturb Pu-contaminated soil will thus be performed by
personnel adequately protected.
2.

The protective clothing prescribed for Pu operations may

range from shoe covers and a surgical mask to a full compliment of shoe
covers, coveralls,
or air lines.

gloves, head covers and facepieces with either filters

Although it is proper to don adequate protective clothing,

there are numerous reasons for not overdressing.

For example,

full-

suiting may be intolerable when worn for extended periods in the warm,

humid climate indigeneous to Enewetak.

The "protection" provided by the

clothes could in fact cause harm by leading to heat injuries.

Thus,

there is an incentive to wear just what is necessary and no more.

The

proper and minimum clothing will only be known precisely following an

evaluation of on-site monitoring (e.g., air samples and nose swipes)
against permissible contamination limits

(See Enclosure 3); nevertheless,

some initial protective-clothing requirements are described below.
3.

With perhaps the exception of Pu suspect areas on Runit, no

surface locations at Enewetak Atoll have a sufficiently high Pu concentration that they pose a hazard to persons merely walking on them;

i.e.,

ordinary "foot traffic" is assumed to not create any resuspension prob-

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