HUMAN RADIATION INJURY
parent that most of this fallout area is beyond
the range of destruction by blast or heat, and
thus one is dealing with essentially a “pure”
radiological situation.
The extent and potential seriousness of fallout was clearly indicated in official releases of
the Atomic Energy Commission (1-4). From
these statements, the bomb’s cloud could drop
radioactive ashes in a cigar-shaped zone about
220 miles long and 20 to 40 miles wide. There
could be sufficient radioactivity in a downwind

belt about 140 miles in length and of varying

width up to 20 miles to seriously threaten the
lives of nearly all persons remaining in the area
for 36 hours and who did not take protective
measures. The zones thus outlined for potential
morbidity and lethality depend obviously on
weapon size, wind and other weather condition,
etc. Strauss(1) emphasized that possible cusualty figures given are for the worst possible sit-

uation. Casualties might be reduced greatly in

number because many in the area would take
shelter or evacuate the area. Also, the pattern
of fallout might be spotty in nature, and thus,
many would escape exposure. Nevertheless, the

area where potentially serious casualties may

result may exceed by orders of magnitude the
relatively small areas for conventional weapons.

6.33

The Effects of Gamma Radiation From
Fallout

The gammaradiations are penetrating and,
as seen in the Marshallese, produce the same
type of injury produced bythe initial radiation
from the conventional weapon. In the one case .
radiationis delivered from a distant source; in the other from essentially a plane field. In
both situations, penetrating radiation of the
entire body results. Qualitatively, the results
are identical. Quantitatively (e. ¢., dose-effect
relationships), there may be differences due to
incompletely known and understood differences
in the energy of radiation and in dose rate, and
in the geometry of exposure (see sec. 6.42). For
these reasons, and for additional reasons to be
advanced later, instrument readings of roentgen
dose measured in air and published dose-effect

97

tables for man should be used only as a rough

guide in casualty estimation.
For order of magnitude of doses that may be

encountered in the fall out area, the following
figures for total dose forthefirst 36 hour period,
are quoted from chairman Strauss’ release (1).

Ten miles downwind from the large device fired
at the Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1954, within the
test site, a total dose of 5,000 roentgens was de-

livered over a period of 36 hours. The largest

total dose delivered outside the test site was
2,300 r for the same period at the north-west
end of Rongelap Atoll about 100 miles from
Bikini. Two other areas in Rongelap 110 and
115 miles from Bikini received 2,000 and 150 r
respectively. Another area, 125 miles from

Bikini received 1,000 r over the 36 hour period.

Effects that may be expected for given doses
of penetrating radiation given over a few minutes or hours are indicated in Table 6.1 (7). It
is emphasized that such tables are derived

chiefly from animal data and thus, should

be taken as approximations only. These
values vary considerably from the British
estimates (8).

Table 6.1.—Effects of Acute Total Body Irradiation on Human Beings
‘ 50r|
100 r

150 r

200 r
300 r
450 r
Over 650 r

No casualties. No reduction in
effectiveness.
.
Two percent may be casualties
(nausea

and/or

vomiting)

for

short period of time. No evacuation contemplated. No significant reduction in effectiveness.
Twenty-five percent casualties in
a few hours. First definite reduction in effectiveness. Fifty
-percent of the casualties in this
group will have to be evacuated.
All must be evacuated as soon as
posaible. Fifty percent will be
noneffestive.
Approximately 20 percent deaths.
All need evacuation immediately.

All are noneffectives.

Fifty percent deaths.
Lethal dose, but not necessarily
for all so exposed.

Select target paragraph3