RADIOACTIVITY ALONG THE 80TH MERIDIAN 485 northern-hemisphere activity levels are highest. Some crossover does occur, as has been observed in the past during the Operations Greenhouse and Hardtack tests and the French Sahara tests and following the renewal of testing of large-yield devices by the U.S.S.R. in September 1961. Several months after the northern-hemisphere air had become heavily contaminated by the U.S.S.R. 1961 tests, short-lived fission products were detected at several sites in South America. From the relative activity levels in the two hemispheres in early 1962, shown in Fig. 3, it can be estimated that only a few percentof the radioactivity from the northern hemisphere could have migrated south of the equator. Because of the small background there of much older, long-lived radioactivity, the new debris contributed heavily to the gross-activity levels at the lower latitudes but addedlittle to the con- centrations of such long-lived fission products as "sr and '3"cs. The Operation Dominic I tests held in the Christmas Island area (2°N) beginning in late April 1962 caused large increases in radioactivity in the lower latitudes of the southern hemisphere during May but contributed surprisingly little activity to the ground-level air in the northern hemisphere. At both Miami and Miraflores, where the major impact of tropospheric debris from these tests was expected, the activity concentrations during the period April through June decreased with a half-period of less than one month, similar to the rate observed in the spring of 1959. Radiochemical analyses confirmed the small influence of these tests on activity levels in the northern hemisphere during 1962; the situation may be similar to that existing following the Operation Hardtack tests of 1958 when ‘®w results showed the major part of the long-lived radioactive debris to be held in the stratosphere until the next spring.'3.45 90Sr IN THE AIR The concentrations of *Sr in the ground-level air at a number of sites along the 80th meridian are shown in Figs. 5 and 6; calculated tropospheric burdens of §0Sr are shown in Fig. 7. These results are more significant in delineating the magnitude of the seasonal changes in activity levels than are gross-activity measurements since they are . less sensitive to radioactive decay. A definite spring maximum of *Sr is observed in the northern hemisphere every year regardless of the past history of nuclear testing. The occurrence of maximums each spring during the moratorium on nuclear testing provides direct evidence that there is a seasonal factor involved in the downward mixing of radioactive debris from the stratoSpheric source. The seasonal cycle has its highest amplitude in the subtropical latitudes; moreover, the time of arrival of the radioac-

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