vice for the entire Task Force.
2.
TG 7.2.
Provision of monitors for security sweeps and
maintenance of a pool of trained monitors and decontamination operators to back up TG 7.1.
3.
TG 7.3.
Provision of facilities afloat for ship-based re-
covery operations together with the necessary helicopter
services and execution of the lagoon water sampling plan.
4.
TG 7.4.
Execution of the radiological safety portion of
the aircraft cloud sampling program and provision cf air~
craft and personnel for the conduct of the Task Force
cloud tracking program.
5.
TG 7.5.
Assumption of radsafe responsibilities for the
entire PPG (except Eniwetok Island) during the interim
operational periods.
With the exception of TG 7.1, the greater portion of the radsafe personnel for the entire Task Force were “additional duty
types with only a few "primary duty" staff and supervisory personnel,
(For necessary supervision, each task group was assigned at
least one fully trained radiological defense engineer.)
Thus, the
Army Task Group trained radsafe personnel from each activity of the
group; the Navy Task Group placed radsafe under Damage Contrel in
acccrdance with routine Navy organizational practices; and the Air
Force Task Greup utilized flight crew members as monitors and maintenance personnel for aircraft decontamination.
The one exceptior,
TG 7.1, had been designated the major radsafe unit for on-site op-
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