-47- HW-80991 The Federal Radiation Council has provided two sets of guides against which exposures from environmental sources can be judged, viz. one for the individuals that receive the greatest exposure, the other for the average exposure received by an exposed population (taken as one-third that set for individuals). For the Hanford environs, possible exposures from the vari- ous sources described in the preceding sections have been combined in two ways to allow comparisons with both the individual and population guides. In one case a hypothetical, but plausible, individual has been assigned die- tary and other habits that would result in what would seem to be the greatest rational exposure. As a second case, an exposure has been estimated for the "average" Tri-City resident. Several hundreds (perhaps a few thousands) of people receive more exposure than calculated for the "average" Tri-City resident but very few, (and quite possibly none) receive as much as that cal- culated for the "maximum" individual. Included in the intermediate group are the families that subsist largely on foodstuffs produced on farmsirri- . gated with water taken from the Columbia River downstream from the plants. A. The Maximum Individual Attempts are being made to identify the individuals that actually receive the greatest exposure. Such individuals are undoubtedly persons that frequently eat fish caught locally in the Columbia River and produce grown on farms irrigated with Columbia River water. During the past 2 years, over 600 fishermen have been questioned by employees of the State of Washington Department of Game on their consumption of fish. The greatest consumption reported was about 200 meals per year, consisting dominantly of crappie, perch, bass, catfish, caught near Burbank (Figure 2). On the basis of radiochemical analyses of such fish caught in this area, the intake of P?? for this individual during 1963 would have amounted to about 7 ye, (about 45% of the NCRP limit). fish is not confirmed. Whether the individual actually ate that much Some other persons reporting unusually high consump- tion of local fish have been counted in the Whole Body Counter and contained far less zn®° than predicted on the basis of their estimates of the quantities of fish eaten.

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