(Reprinted from Nature, Vol. 203, No. 4945, pp. 571-573,
August 8, 1964)

ANALYSES OF RADIONUCLIDES OF
BIOLOGICAL INTEREST IN
PACIFIC WATERS

By D. CHAKRAVARTi, G. B. LEWIS, R. F. PALUMBO
and A. H. SEYMOUR
Laboratory of Radiation Biology, University of Washington,
Seattle

NVESTIGATIONS of the distribution of radionuclides
in marine environments have been made by the
Laboratory of Radiation Biology, University of Washington, since 1946. These investigations have included
radicchemical analyses of marine samples from the
western and central Pacific, the north-eastern Pacific
and the Arctic Ocean (Chukehi Sea). The analyses
diseusscd here are those of samples collected recently in
the Pacific Ocean. One group of samples was collected
in the vicinity of Christmas Island during the 1962 tests
of nuclear devices by the United States; another group
was taken froin near the mouth of the Columbia River
where the effluent, carrying radioactive wastes from the
Hanford reactors, mixes with the Pacific Ocean; and one

sample was taken 250 miles off the Oregon coast.
Radionuelides from both natural and artificial sources
occur in these waters. The most abundant and easily
detected naturally occurring radionuclide is potassium-40.
Other natural radionuclides to be expected in sea-water
are radium, uranium, thorium and their decay products.
Most of the artificial radionuclides generally present in
the oceans are added as fall-out from nuclear detonations.
The fall-out nuclides of biological interest include the
fission products: strontium-89, 90, zirconium-95-niobium95, rutLhenium-103, 106, caesium-137 and certum-141, 144;

and the induced radionuclides: manganese-54, tron-55, 59,
cobalt-57, 58, 60 and zine-65.

The induced radionuclides

phosphorus-32, chromimm-51] and zine-65, carried to the
sea by the Coluinbia River, are produced by neutron
activation of clements in tho water used to cool the
Hanford reactors.
Radionuchdes in sea-water may be concentrated many
thousand-fold by plankton. However, plankton constitutes only a mimuto fraction of the total water mass,
hence the amount of radioactivity in the total water mass
is greator than in the total plankton.
The concentration of radioactivity by plankton provides a convenient method for detormining the presence,
but not the amounts. of radionuclides in sea-water. A
quantitative mincasurement can be mado only by water

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