Potassium contents tends to be proportional to body weight. In the man measured, the average Potassium content is 9.183% of body weight; whereas a slightly lower value of 0.157% was measured for women. This compares closely with average Potassium values of 0.188% of body weight for men and 0.154% for women as measured with a Nal(Tl) crystal counter by Miller and Marineili (2), Anderson, et at, ') report that the Potassium content of the adult male is 0.19% of gross body weight as measured in the Los Alamos Human Counter. Cesium It has from milk. been about 50% of the Cesium 137 in people comes An attempt was made to correlate our Cesium measurements with milk consumption. content to fraction stated'>) that Plotted values show that although there is a trend for Cesium increase with milk of the observed consumption, individual this accounts differences. for only Several a small reasons are postulated for these individual differences: 1. Milk consumption was an estimated and not a measured quantity. 2. No account was taken of the consumption of cheese and other dairy products. 3. The milk supply in Salt Lake City comes from widely scattered areas which may differ appreciably in fallout contaminations. 4. Individual differences may exist in the ability to assimilate and retain Cesium. 5. The standard deviation, 13 unc cs!37 gram K, of an individual meas- urement amounts to about 20% of the average Cesium to Potassium ratio. This contributes to scatter in Cs/K values but accounts for only part of the ob- served variation. |

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