i. d w d r y Sy or ¥s ‘al he Is be The highest individual exposure for specific personnel authorized additional exposure was 12.4 r. During the tests, two Japanese International Geophysical Year ships reported contamination from fallout and sickness among the ships’ crews while cruising near the Island of Truk. A medical team dispatched by the Joint Task Force to examine personnel and ships confirmed earlier reports by Japanese scientists that the maximum exposure might have been about 100 milliroentgens, and probably was nearer 20 milliroentgens. The medical team reported no evidence that any crew member suffered from radiation exposure. - Counting of the first half of these . on” ns at in Medical Re-eramination. of the Rongelap People . “ ‘ ck . Rongelap ecology studyincludes monitoring of foodstuffs. wr =F yg s. At the latest in a series of medical examinations given the people of Rongelap Atoll (February-March 1958) during the 4 years after aight F nae 3 samples has been completed. The little radioactivity found can be accounted for almost entirely by the naturally occurring radioisotope potassium 40. Rongelap ecological studies. Thefirst phase of a long-termecological survey of Rongelap Atoll in the Marshall Islands was carried out during February and March and again in the July-Decemberperiod. Initial studies were made of various types of soil and the distribution of radioactive materials in soils, plants, and ground water. Reconhaissance surveys of Rongelap, Eniaetok, and Kabelle Islands, were followed by detailed examination of soil profiles, collection of samplesof soil, fish, corals, rats, birds, plankton, and some invertebrates. The at ae } aig 2 Radiobiological surveys of the Pacific. Results of surveys during the Pacific tests to monitor radioactivity in water and marine organisms included the following activities and findings: A post-operation marine radiobiological survey was conducted before the danger area was disestablished. A similar marine survey was conducted from Eniwetok Atoll to Guam and return during September. Sea water and plankton samples obtained during this survey indicated radioactivity levels of the same order of magnitude as that during a similar post-test survey in 1956. By the end of September numerous samples of tuna had been sent to the Laboratory of Radiation Biology, University of Washington, for counting and analysis. Catches were made in the Western Pacific _in an area about equal to the size of the United States surrounding the Pacific Test Site restricted zone. er Ba Lr hay aa — , 195 mee a the maximum permissible exposure of 5 r for the operation. crepegate JULY-DECEMBER 1958 °

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