131CS PASSAGE FROM PRECIPITATION TO MILK 707 individual rains and accompanying wind and ground dust storms. The degree to which forage covers the ground also represents a large factor in determining the efficiency of deposition. Comparison between the '’Cs concentration of milk and rainfall 1) (Fig. activity a a indicated that milk produced by A T cows on pasture T t —— PASTURE HERD - ot so o 4 --- 3x COWS See | 7 — frre BULK MILK oe a io == i: ~ O w = T S zc A T = <t \ , ae {| \. Litt 0 20 40 tf ty 40 pt 80 JAN. 1, 1963 tt 100 a ~ é 4 Ww 4 3 o 4 a LL 1 7 T 10! > die = wa UO < ee ft EE )6©6120)0«140 MAY 1, 1943 «#3160 BEER PEE 180 200 JUNE 13, 1963 Sy 220 260 Z = [ 240 a 4 280 SEPT. 17, 1963 TIME, DAYS Fig. 1—Concentrations of "Cs in milk produced by cows on pasture, cows fed ina dry lot (bulk milk), and high-milk-producing cows milked three times a day and fed in a dry lot (3x) related to corresponding rainjall activity, 1963. responded almost immediately to increases in forage activity, except for the period around day 240, at which time the herd was largely dependent upon hay for feed rather than on pasture. This response does not agree with the statement that ‘“‘peak concentrations of cesium137 in milk have appeared about one month after peak fallout rates.’” Feed-Milk Transfer of 137Cs Dairy cattle normally are fed large amounts of hay and/or pasture, both of which may contain much higher levels of fallout ‘Cs than those found in grains, which are the other major components of the diet. It is much easier to obtain reliable estimates of the transfer coefficient between feeds and milk than between precipitation and feeds because experiments to test the latter can bedesigned at will whereas, for the former, experiments are dependent upon the vagaries of the weather. An average value for the ratio of '°’Cs contained in feed which would be found in milk would be most useful for prediction of the activity in milk expected from cows that had grazed on contaminated

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