interest in terms of health lies not in the mere presence of radioisotopes, but in the amounts and more specif.cally in the quantity of radiation doses delivered by these radioisotopes. The levels of activity from fall-out, outside the area surrounding the Pacific Proving Ground, have beenfar less than any required to produce detectable injury either from the radioisotopes within the body or from external radiation, or from a combination of the two. AMa at Alain ola CrviL DEFENSE In its cooperative program to furnish technical advice and information relating to national civil defense preparedness, the Commission participated in a number of special meetings and discussions. A White House Conference for State Governors, arranged by the Federal Civil Defense Administration included an address by Chairman Strauss outlining AEC civil defense activities common to the national security program. Sessions were held with staff members of FCDA and the Department of Defense to determine current needs of FCDA and the feasibility of future civil defense experiments during test operations. The AEC expressed a willingness to cooperate in all ways possible in a civil effects test program comprising: Structures and associated services and equipment; industrial participation; civil defense training exercise; and observers and public media participation. Proposals have been submitted on certain parts of the total program by FCDA. These are being reviewed for feasibility pending official action on ® i] fot tek 9 BR oh . The radioactive isotopes to be found normally in the body are potassium 40, carbon 14’and radium 226. The radiopotassium and radiocarbon are distributed throughout the tissues while the radium is almost entirely located in the skeleton. In addition to this internal irradiation, man is subjected to cosmic rays from without and to the gamma rays from radium in the soil. To this natural - exposure, the radiation from bomb products is added. Thepoint of ad ws also detectable in the urine of some humanisfor a short time. tiie et topes, such as iodine 131 (8-da y Thalt-life), were still present in the _ fall-out. Although the amounts of radioactivity deposited. were _biologically insignificant, it was possible, by special techniques, to. demonstrate radioiodine in the thyroid glands and in the urine of ~ grazing animals. Extremely minute quantities of iodine 131 were’ sisi Transportation of the radioactive materials to the United States took only several days. Thus some of the shorter half-life radioiso- Ot deposited widely over the United States during the Pacific tests and in some areas resulted in transitory rises of the normal background radiation levels. Onwy.Aa S Om oo = JANUARY—JUNE 1954 i 54

Select target paragraph3