au
Kh.oISHe
(continued)
ataosphere.
Gg!
I'm wondering if we shouldn't consider this...
No, I'm thinking of a mechaniaa that Dr. Mitchell mentioned,
retention in the hinge, what telerances we can expect of that.
MITCHELL:
I have those figures, but, I aleo have to have that as poesible
accunulation in the skeleton.
FOICRs
«CLAUS s
Yes.
Dr. Western has been making some caloulations on thie for sou
time, and maybe he can get s0m@e.sse
ERANISHs
Gould you make a few remarks, Dr. Western?
WESTERNs
The inhalation hasard is very difficult to estinate like all
these other things.
One has to make eny nosber of assusptions.
One of these things which I think would be impurtant would be
the problem posed by Dr. Wexler earlier this morning, that if
the stuff came dom in rain primarily, or whether it coms down
in the air.
If it comes down in rain I don't think you'd breathe
very much of it.
If it comes dom in the dry air primarily, I
think you'd have a vary good chance of breathing ali the aaterial
that we consider being emall enough to be drifting down over
long periods of time, #0 I should likes to say in pessing that
it would be of some importance to determine, in establishing an
inhalation ha,ard, whether it does come down in rain, or
whether it comes dam in ths air.
Gut if one makes some broad assumptions about what the
behavior of the stuff is after it enters the limg.
SE
I assuned
DOE ARCHIVES