-~ 2. determining regions of greater or lesser concentration. (26, 27) Tropospheric fallout has contributed significantly to the radioactive debris now encountered over the northern hemisphere as a result of weapons testing in the Pacific, in Nevada and by the USSR. Stratospheric fallout has somewhat different characteristics and distributions. It consists of particles which rise into the atmosphere but which do not fall out either as near-in or early fallout or as tropospheric or latitudinal fallout during the first month or two following their formation but because of their small size are removed from the upper atmosphere so slowly that their average period of suspension is a matter of years. Machta stated that it is not kmown whether theyare earried down into the tropopause only by sir currents or are also carried down by theirown weight. He conjectured, however, that the principal factor in removal is downward atmospheric motions, though the particles may in addition settle downwards at a rate of a mile or so a year. Un- fortunately, knowledge of atmospheric movement in the stratosphere is still very primitive and it will take several more years of intense effort, much of it associated with studies of nuclear weapons tests debris, before one can mike more definitive statements on this point. There are two major hypotheses as to the distribution pattern of stratospheric fallout which are being considered at the present time. One is the relatively simple one of relatively rapid horizontal mixing with more or less uniform passage of the debris through the tropopause, thence to be relatively uniformly distributed over the surface of the earth as a result of tropospheric weather phenomena. In this case, there would be essentially no fallout where there is no rain at all and

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