STRATOSPHERIC DISTRIBUTION OF NUCLEAR DEBRIS 307 shot, which produced that tracer nuclide. By mid-1963 the “Sr and the ‘Cd concentrations had decreased substantially. Perhaps this decrease resulted from dilution of the debris as it mixed horizontally and vertically. At 90,000 ft at Mildura, relatively high concentrations of Sr and ‘Cd were found by April 1963, and by mid-1963 they were found «t still lower altitudes. Thus the debris from the Starfish Prime injection, and perhaps debris from other high-altitude injections, was moving downward through the stratosphere of the southern hemisphere during 1963, causing changes in the concentrations of "Sr found at various altitudes at Mildura. It is not possible to ascertain whether the effective source region was in the tropical stratosphere near the latitude of injection or whether this debris, like that from the Orange rocket shot in 1958, entered the lower stratosphere in the polar regions and subsequently spread equatorward.’?® Additional information on the changes that occurred with time in the stratospheric concentrations of *°Sr at altitudes below 70,000 ft may be found in data obtained by means of WU-2 aircraft sampling in Project Star Dust. Monthly mean values of “Sr concentrations found at 45,000, 55,000, and 65,000 ft in the northern polar stratosphere at 65°N are shown in Fig. 4. At all three altitudes there was a general increase in concentrations between early 1962 and late 1962 and a general decrease between early 1963 and mid-1964. 10 TTT TTT TTT try rrr rrr rt 0s; ACTIVITY, DIS/MIN PER 1000 SCF 65° N @ 65,000 FT © 55,000 FT A 45,000 FT 10 q Piper i tpt ti tert sy i Lettttrpga tp titiii ia tit JJASONDJFMAMJJASONDJFMAMJJASOND JFMAMJJASOND 1961 1962 1963 1964 Fig. 4—Trends in *Sr activity.

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