RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT - A LITERATURE SEARCH

43
MARSH,4LL ISLANDS FILE TRACKING DOCUMENT 3s/ Record Number: - ,,’ I .,’ Previks Location (FROM): AUTHOR/$k??~ I J .i’ Addditiehal Information: _ Orh+_Ibox: & CyMlbox: . i 5..

Transcript of RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT - A LITERATURE SEARCH

MARSH,4LL ISLANDS FILE TRACKING DOCUMENT

3s/ Record Number: -

,,’ I

.,’

Previks Location (FROM):

AUTHOR/$k??~ I J .i’

Addditiehal Information: _

Orh+_Ibox: &

CyMlbox: .

i 5..

$ti*** UNITEID STATES ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION fn%ttk12*

8

iz

: It

TI D-3528

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT

A Literature Search

Compiled by William E. Bost Sidney F. Lanier Raymond L. Scott Hugh E. Voress

April 1959

TID-3528

RADIOAC~~IVE FALLOUT l

.~. Introduction

This literature searcil was compiled to fill a specific request. It is being

issued in report form because of t"e general interest in its subject.

Included are sa references on dispersal and fallout of radioactive debris

from nuclear explosions. It supplements the bibliography cited in the

1957 Congressional Fallout Bearings.

The references are divided into three parts: AEC reports, non-A&C reports,

and published artic:.es. Report references are arranged alphabetically by corporate aut'nor and alphanumerically by report number. Published references

are arranged alphabetically by title.

The reports referenced in tne first part (AEC reports) can be examined at the AEC depository libraries listed in each issue of IJuclear Science Abstracts. They can also be purchased from the Cffice of Technical Services (OTS), Department of Co,mmerce, Washington 25, D. C. A full size printed copy is available for the reports having a single price listed; other reports are available as photostat (ph) or microfilm (mf) copies- If no price is shown, a quotation may be obtained by writing OTS. In addition, microcopies of these reports may be available. Requests concerning the purchase of unclassified AEC reports in this form should be directed to the following

organizations:

Microcard Foundation Readex ;Jicroprint Corporation

P. 0. Box 2145 100 Fifth Avenue

Madison 5, Wisconsin Mew York 11, Xew York

A few of the non&EC reports are available either from 0% (see above), from the British Information Service (BIS), 45 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, X. Y., or from the Scientific Document Distribution Office, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL), Chalk River, Ontario, Canada, but information concerning the availability of non-&X reports generally will have to be sought from the issuing agenciesa

Journals are cited for each of the published references.

AM: Reports

Argonne Rational Lab., Leiiiont, Ill.

THE IBFLJEl~CE OF STRO;;TILJX-90 UPOII LIFE SPA3 kl;D ;ZOPMSXS Finkel, Birute 0. Eiskis, and Gertrude hI. Scribner. lip. (UNCLASSIFIED) $0.50(OTS).

OF UICE. 3irian P. (A/COXF.l5/P/911)

2

Argonne National Lab., Lemon&, 111,

RADIOLOGICAL PHYSICS DIVISION SEiXIANNUAL REPORT FOR JrJLY THROUGH DECEMBER 1957. Feb. 1958. 230~. (ANL-5829) UNCLASSIFIED 85,50(OTS),

RADIOLOGICAL PHYSICS DIVXION SEXIANNUAL REPORT FOR JANUARY THROUGH JUNE 1958, Sept. 1958. 143~. (ML-5919) UNCLASSIFIED $2.75(OTS).

ON THE STRATOSPHERIC SrgO FALLOUT. PO K. Kuroda. Ott, 1958. 40~0 (ANL-5920) 'UNCLASSIFIED $1,25(OTS).

ENVIROXXE?JTAL RADIOACTIVI1!Y AT ARGOUNE UATIONAL LABORATORY. Report for Year 1957. J. Sedlet. Oct. 1958, 42~~ (&N&5934) UNCLASSIFIED $1,25(OTS).

Atomic Energy Commission, Washington, D. C.

A LIST OF REFEREBCES ON CESIUX-137. United States Reports, Articles and Speeches. 1958. 4p. (WASH-1004) UNCLASSIFIED.

A SELECTED LIST OF REFERFXES ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Alfred W. Klement, Jr.> camp. Feb, 14, 1958,, 8p. (WASH-1005) UNCLASSIFIED,

Broornaven National Lab.> Upton, N. Y,

ExpOSURE CRITERIA FOR ESTIXATIXG THE CONSE@JENCES OF A CATASTROPHE IN A NUCLEAR PLAITT. J. B. H. Kuper and F. P, Cowan0 12p, (A/CONF.l5/P/430) u~JCLASSIFIED #0.50(0TS),

QUARTERLY PRQGRESS REPORT FOR JULY 1 - SEPTEMBER 30, 1957. 56~. (BNL-473) UNCLASSIFIED $1.75(OTS).

T::E DISTRIBUTIOZ OF FALLOlJT ACTIVITY Iii RAINFALL AT BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LABORA- TORYp JUNE TO SEPTEXBER 1957, F. P. Cowan and J, Steimers. Mar. 1958. 9p. (BNL-496) URCLASSIFIED $0.50(OTS),

THE ACCUI;rXATIOB OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT ON TYPICAL XATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION, F. P. Cowan0 Mar, 1958. lop. (BNL-497) UXXASSIFIED $0.50(OTS),

MARCH 1957 IEDICAL SURVEY OF RONGELAP AND UTIRIK PEOPLE THREE YEARS AFTER EXPOSURE TO RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT, Robert g, Conard, Leo IJI, Ivleyer, J. Edward Rail, Austin Lowery, Sven A. Bach, Branford Cannon, Edwin L, Carter, Xaynard Either, and Hyman Hechter. June 1958. 29p. (BNL-501) UNCLASSIFIED $l.OO(OTS).

FALLOUT, CIVIL DEFEICSE AN.1 EFFECTS OF RADIATION OB MANe Eugene P. Cronkite, June 5, 1957, 10~. (BNL-3244) LXCLASSIFIED.

FALLOUT RADIATIOXs EFFECTS OR THE SKII<, Robert A, Conard, Eugene P. Cronkites and Victor P, Bond. July 22, 1957. 28~. (BBL-3298) UNCLASSIFIED,

3

Brookhaven ILTational Lab., Upton, I$. Y.

ATOXIC BOW? FALLOUT PLXD ITS 11;IPLICATIOXS p Victor P. Bond. Nov. 5, 1957. 13P. (BNL-3429) UNCLASSIFIED.

STRONTIUM 90 - BIBLIOGRAPHY. M. Constock. Dec. 31, 1957. lop. (M-6472) UWLA.SSIFIED.

California, Univ., Berkeley. Cracker Lab. and California. Univ., Berkeley. Donner Lab.

ESTIMATIOB OF THE TUEXO'JER EQUATIOX OF STROI,JTITa,!I-90 FOR HUXAM BOXES. Patricia Durbin arid E:ardin Jones. 4p. (A/COIJF. 15/P/887; UCRL-8083) UI~CLASSIFIED $0.5O(OTS).

California. Uziv., Berkeley. Radiation Lab.

Xl3TABOIJ.C STUDIES VITH STRONTIU&90 IlJ THE RHESUS ~~IOEKEY. Preliminary Report. Patricia W. Durbin, Marshall W. Parrot-t, Xarilyn H. Vfilliams. Muriel E. Johnston, C. Xillet Asling, and Joseph G. Hamilton. Jan. 7, 1957. 26~. (UCRL-3634) UNCL,ASSI FIED $0.25(OTS).

HUMAN ANXD CATTLE THYROID RADIOACTIVITY ASSOCIATED KITH FALLOUT: OCTOBER 1955 TO OCTOBER 1956, Xargaret R. White. Mar. 1, 1957. 15~. QJcRLr3703) UNCLASSIFIED Qk3.30(ph OTS); $2.4O(mf OTS).

BIOLOGY A?JD XEDICIIJE 2UARTERLY REPORT FOR JULY, AUGUST, SEPTEMBER 1957, Qct. 14, 1957. 19p. (~C~~-8031) wmwmm $0.75(oTs).

BIOLOGY AND XZDICIiJE SEZIAWJAL &REPORT FOR OCTOBER 1957 THROUGH XARCB 1958. Apr. 25, 1958. 65~. (UCRL-8265) UNCLASSIFIED $1.75(OTS).

FALLOUT AUD NATURAL BPCKGROUXD IIJ THE SAX FRANCISCO BAY ASEA. H. Vl'ade Patterson, Alan R. Smith, and Lloyd D. Stephens. Aug. 4, 1958, 17~. (UCRL-8401) UNCLASSIFIED $0,75(OTS),

California. Univ., Los Angeles. Atomic Energy Project.

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REI?ORT FOR PERIOD ENDING JUNE 30, 1951. July 2, 1951. Decl. ?4ar. 6, 1957. 96p. (UCLA-143) UNCLASSIFIED #15.30(ph OTS); $5.4O(mf OTS).

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD EIJDIXG i.IARCH 31, 1952. Apr. 1, 1952. Decl. with deletions 'I&r. 7, 1957. 71~. (UCI&195(Del.)) L.?CLASSIFIED $12.30(ph OTS); $4.5O(nf OTS).

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING JUBE 30, 1952. July 10, 1952, Decl. Mar. 19, 1957. 80~. (UCLA-206) UXLASSIFIED #12.30(ph OTS); #4.50(mfOTS)

4

California. Univ., LOS Angeles. Atomic Energy Project.

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING JtJUE 30, 1953,, July 1, 1953. Decl.

mr. 6, 1957, 99p. (UCLA=260) UNCIXXIFTED $15.30(ph OTS); $5,4O(mf OTS).

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDIiJG DECEXJBER 319 1955. Jan, 1, 1956,

DeC+ Mar, 199 1957, 115p.

(mf OTS ). 0JCU-357) UECLASSIFTED $18,30(ph OTS); $6.00

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING XARCH 31, 1956. Apro 1, 1956, Decl. with deletions Mar. 4, 1957. 104~. #16.80(ph OTS); #5,70(mf OTS).

(UCLA-362(Del.),) UNCLASSIFIED

QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ERDING JUNE 300 1956, July 1, 1956. Decl. Mar. 6, 1957. 112p. $5.70(mf OTS)0

(UCLA-371) UNCLkSSIFIED $16,80(ph QZTS);

$IARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDING SEPTEMBER 309 1956. Oct. 1, 1956. Decl. Mar. 6, 1957. (mf OTS )a

14% (UC%379) UNCLASSIFIED Qk22,80(ph OTS); $7.20

,xrAHTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR PERIOD EXDING DECEMBER 31, 1956, Jan. 1, 1957. ;;;-ll-W. 14, 1957, 124~. (UCLA-386) (xf OTS )o

UNCLASSIFIED $18.30(ph OTS); $6.00

TRE EFFECT OF PACIFIC WEAPOXS TESTIiJG O?; BACKGROUND .ACTIVITIES IN TRE STATE CF CALIFORRIAO Lo Baurmash, J. T. Reel, and R, F. Butts. (UC&388) UNCLASSIFIED $6.30(ph OTS);

May 14, 1957, 33po $3,00(mf OTS),

5s~~ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR THE PERIOD ENDING JUNE 30, 1957. July lo, 1>)57. 7op. (UCW-399) UNCLASSIF1:ED.

~;r=fiRY OF CERTAIN TRENDS IIT SOIL-PIART RELATIONSHIP STUDIES OF TBE BIOLOGICAL AyAII.,ABIuTY OF FALL-OUT DEBRIS,, H. Nishi'ta and K. H, Earsons July 28, 1957. 68~. (UCLA-401) UNCLASSIFIED $0,4O(OTS),

*;';iE DISTRIBUTION OF PLUTONIUM IPJ THE SOILS OF CElJTRAL AXD NORTHEASTERN NEW UICO AS A RESULT OF THE ATOXIC BOXB TEST OF JULY 16;1945, J. H. Olafson, 5, Nishita, and K. H. Larson. Sept, 19, 1957, 25~. (UCM-406) UNCLASSIFIED $$.75(OTS).

A Tim OF ARRIVAL INDICATOR FOR RADIOACTiVE FALLOUT. Ross ‘X0 Farmer and Oscar S+iner, Jr. Nova 22, 1957. 16~. (UCLA-413) UNCLASSIFIED $0.50(OTS),

~~I.-ARNUAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR THE PERIOD ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1957. Jan. 15, :$56. 60~. (UCLA-420) UNCLASSIFIED #1,75(OTS).

Ca

A' E. Ja:

EW BY IB

t::

BET Ric:

25~.

Chic

STRC AIR Decl UNCL

STROI AIR: 1956.

c01um

STRON (M-67:

Dow Ck

DETECT 1957.

Genera.

XETHOD felder (APEX-3

saI-A.RhvAL PROGRESS REPORT FOR THE PERIOD ENDING JUNE 30, 1958. July lo, 1958. G;p. (UCLA-429) UXLASSIFIED $1.25@TS).

1.

.

AL

ED

:ar

15,

1958.

5

California. Univ., Los Angeles. Atomic Energy Project.

A GRAWLAR COLLECTOR FOR SAXPLI~~G FALLOUT DEBRIS FRO!.{ NUCLEAR DETOI~ATIOXS. E. M'. Ro.mey, J. W. Beel, G. M. LeRoy, A. J. Steen, and K. H. Larson. Jan. 30, 1959. 29p. (UCLA-432) UNCLASSIFIED.

EVALUATIOX OF THE .ACUTE IXBALATIOB HAZAARD FROZI RADIOACTIVE FALL-OUT XATERIALS BY ANALYSIS OF RESULTS FROId FIELD OPERATIOXS AND CONTROLLED IXIALATIOX STUDIES I$J THE LABORATORY, G. V. Taplin, 0. M. ideredith, Jr., and H. gade. June 1957. 26~. Project 37.3 of OPERATION TEAPOT. @T-1172) UXCLASSIFIED $0.75(OTS).

BETA SKIN-DOSE ~:IEASUREXE;:TS BY SPECIALLY DESIGNED FILX-PACK DOSIXETERS. Richard K. Dickey, Louis B. Silverman, and Mary Lee Griswold. 3&y 1957. 25~. Project 37.2 of OPERATION TEAPOT. (~1178~) Ui?XASSIFIED $0,25(0~~).

Chicago. Univ. Enrico Fermi Inst. for Nuclear Studies.

STROlJTIU&90 CONCEBTRATIOIJ DATA FOR BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS, SOILS, 1?ATERS, AXD AIR FILTERS. Project Sunshine Bulletin No. 11. E. A. Martell. Dec. 1, 1955. Decl. with deletions Nov. 30, 1956. Revised Jan. 1957. 67~. (AECD-3763) UNCLASSIFIED #0.4o(oTS).

STRONTIUM-90 COXEZiXATIOli DATA FOR BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS, SOILS, \;?ATERS, AXD AXR FILTERS. 'Project Sunshine Bulletin No. 12, E. A. Martell. Aug. 1, 1956. Revised Jan. 1957. 70~. (AECU-3297(R ev.)) UNCLASSIFIED #0.45(OTS).

Columbia Univ. New York. Lamont Geological Observatory.

STRONTIU&90 IX FOOD. J. L. Gulp, R. Slakter, and 9. R. Schulert. 1958. 22p. (M-6712) UNCLASSIFIED.

Dow Chemical Co. Rocky Flats Plant, Denver.

DETECTI AND XEASUREIZENT OF RADIOACTIVE PARTICULATES. T. S. 'Chapman. Dec. 5, 1957. 16~. (RFP-92) UNCLASSIFIED $3.30(ph OTS); $2.4O(af OTS).

General Electric Co. Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Dept., Cincinnati.

XETHOD OF ESTIMATING DOSAGE TO GROUND 'FRO&I A RADIOACTIVE CLOUD. C. C. Ga:nerts- felder and R. L. 1Taterfield. Oct. 1955. Published Jan. 6, 1958. 27~. (APEX-348) UIXLA~~IFIED ~1.00(0~~).

6

General Electric Co. Hanford Atomic Products Operation, Richland, Xash.

%?I;;D PICKUP OF RADIOACTIVE PARTICLES FRO;; TSE G;?OUIiD. John W, Healy and James J, Fuquay. lip. (A/COBF.l5/P/391.) UXCLASSIFIED 30.50(OTS).

ABSORPTIO:; OF cESIU&l37 BY CO;JPOdE::TS OF A:? AQUATIC CO1.S.,;iL.;TTY, Robert C. Pendleton and ifay-he C. Hanson, lop. (A/C0::~.15jP/392) u:~CLkss~wzD $0,50(0~~),

RADIOSTROBTIUhWALCIUM LRELATIO;JS IN PLAMTS AUD AXIXAIS. H. & Kornberg, 12~. (A/COXFF,15/P/1029) UNCLASSIFIED $0,50(O.TS),

GAMMA-1RAY SPECTROXETRIC SYSTEMS OF A;jALYSIS. R. X. Perkins, 37~. (A/COXF,15/P/2377) UBCLASS.IFIED '$0,50(OTS),

RADIOCHEXICAL ANALYSIS OF X&V0 SHOT SOIL SAX%%. C, X;;r, Thomas, Jan. 15, 1957. 18~0 (%%=.38987) UMCLASSIFIED $0,20(OTS),

XETEOROLOGY AS RELATED TO WASTE DISPOSAL AXD N-EAPOXS TESTS,, J. J. Fuquay-. Jan. 15, 1957, 39p* (H&=47721 A) UXCLASSIFIED &OO(OTS).

1UAXFORD BIOLOGY RESEARCH Al:XAL REPORT FOR 1957. Jan, 10, 1958. 227~. (HW-53500) UI~~CLASSIFIED $3.50(OTS).

CALCULATIONS OF EXVIROXXE?l~AL CONSEQUENCES OF RF.,ACTOR ACCIDEXTS. Interim Report. J. N. Healy, Dee,, 11, 1957. 50~. (IF&-54128) UXLASSIFIED $1.5O(OTS).

RESEARCH AXD DE'/ELOPXEXT ACTIVITIES IIT THE FIELD OF lRADIOLOGICAL SCIENCES QJARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT FOR OCTOBER -= DECEMBER 1957, J. %* Healyo ed. Feb. 12, 1958. Decl, Xay 12, 1958. 43~. #3~OO(mf a?s).

(HW.54938) bNCI.,ASSIFIED @.30(ph OTS);

General &.lls, Inc., Minneapolis.

UPPER AThIOSPHERE XOXTORIX PROGRAM - P%SES I AlkD II e Quarteriy Report Covering Period January 1, 1957 thru April 1, 1957. (Report 1695). Sidney Stern, William Zeller, Alfred Scheckman, Robley Stuart, and Sam Jones. Apra 30, 1957, 55~~ Project 89125. $3.6O(mf OTS),

(AECU-3680) UNCLASSIFIED $9,30(ph OTS);

UPPER ATXOSPtiERE ;dOXTORIiJG PROGRA#I - PHASES I AXD II, Progress Report 140. 2 Covering Period April 1, 1957 thru October 1, 1957, (Report TJo. 17981, Sidney Stern, William Zeller, Alfred Scheckrnan, Robley Stuart, and Sam Jones. Xov. 11, 1957. Project 89125. (AlXU-3681) UXXASSIFIED $9.30(ph OTS); $3a60(mf' OTS),

UPPER ATr6OSPEERE ;,iOXTOXiJG PROGRA:I. Quarterly Report Covering Period February 1, 1958 thru June 30, 1958, Report Xo. 1884, Sidney Stern, Lee Torgeson, Stephen Rohrbough, Eruce Johnson. Carl Peterson, and Rex .;iood, Xoir. 7, 1958. 51~. Project No, 89125, (AECU-3904) ULJCLASSIFIED $9*3O(ph OTS); $3.6O(mf 0%).

: I (

E R P

E: Nt &.F

E3

(F LJX

PRl

Re1 oc-i 31.

PRE

Rep Joh:

PREl (Lei

Aug o

Knol

IikDI( PrOsI

Char,,- $0.45

General %.lls, Inc., Minneapolis,

UPPER ATIZaPHERE YOXITORIZG PRMXWI, Progress Report Covering Period July 1 to October 30, 1958. Report No. 1890. Sidney C. Stern, L. Torgeson, and

H. Zeller. Jan. 1, 1959. 41~. Project No. 89125. (AECU-3974) UNCLASSIFIED $6.30(ph OTS); $30OO(mf OTS).

Idaho Operations Office. Health and Safety Div,, AEC and Tennessee. Univ., Memahis. Coil. of idedicine.

BIOLOGICAL MONITORIIJ~> OF RECEIJT AIR-BORNE FISSION PRODUCTS. N. R. French and L. Van Xiddleworth. 7p. (A/CONF.l5/P/2497) UNCLASSIFIED $0.50(OTS).

Illinois Inst. of Tech:, Chicago. Armour Research Foundation.

EFFICIERCY OF SCAVEZXXG DEVICES USED IN DETERXIXII~G FALLOUT. Progress Report No. 5 for February 1, to i&zch 15, 1957. John Rosinski, 14~. ARF Project C-082. @ECU-3435) UNCLXXIFIED $3.3O(ph QTS); $2,40(mf OTS).

EFFICIEXY OF SCAVE,isIXG DEVICES USED ITJ DETERXIBIXG FALLO'JT. Scientific Report No. 1. (Report No. 4). Jan Rosinski. Jan. 25, 1957. 130~. ARF Project Bo. C-082. (AECU-3486) UXLASSIFIED $3.25(OTS).

EFFICIENCY OF SCAVEKXXG DEVICES USED IX DETERZINIXG FALLOUT. Progress Report NO. 6 for 1Jarch 15 to July 31, 1957. John Rosinski. Sept. 23, 1957. 4op. &RF Project C 082. (AECU-3547) UNCLASSIFIED $6.30(ph OTS); $3.OO(mf OTS).

EFFICIEXY OF SCAVEBGIXG DEVICES USED IN DETERMINI';JG FALLOUT. Report tio. 7

(Final), Jan Rosinski. Feb. 24, 1958. 29p. ARF Project C 082. (AECU-3666)

L%KX,ASSIFIED $l.OO(OTS),

PRELIMINARY STUDIES OF SCAVEXGIUG SYSTFXS RELATED TO IRADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Report No. 3 (Letter Report) for August 1 to October 1, 1958. John D. Stockham. act, 22, 1958. 7p. ARF Project C 127. (AECU-3880) UXCLASSIFIED @.80(ph OTS); $1.80(mf OTS).

PRELIXINARY STUDIES OF SCAVEXGI:iG SYSTEMS RELATED TO RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Report No. 1 (Letter Report) for April 1 - June 1, 1958. J. Stockham and John Rosinski, June 12, 1958. 5p. (M-6624) UNCLASSIFIED.

PRELIXNARY STUDIES OF SCAVKIGIXG SYSTE;B RELATED TO RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. (Letter Report No. 2) for June 1 - August 1, 1958. J. Stockham and J. Rosinski.

Aug. 7, 1958. 6p. (?d-6677) UXLASSIFIED.

Knolls Atomic Power Lab., Scilenectady, N, Y.

RADIOLOGICAL DEVELOPXEEITT ACTIVITIES IX TfIE ZEALTH PHYSICS KIT. Semiannual Progress Report for July - December 1955. L, J. Cherubin and J. J. Fitzgerald.

Changed from OFFICIAL USE OXLY June 3, 1957. 52~. (K&%-1572) UNCLASSIFIED

$0.45(OTS),

Los Blamos Scientific Lab., N. Mex.

ME?XANIS~S OF FRACTIONATIOTja J. L, Magee. Nov. 16, 19530 Decl. Nov. 7,.,:.2& 1958. 15no (LADC-2840) UNCLASSIFIED. . *3

New York Operations Office, Health and Safety Lab., AEC.

EXTERNAL EiJVIRO1fi&WTAL RADIATION MEASUREMENTS IN THE UNITED STATES. L, R, Solon, W. M. Lewder, A. V. Zila, H. D. Levine, H. Blah, aad M. Eisenbud.

..:,lf_$$

16~. (A/CoIJF.l5/P/740) UNCLASSIFIED $0.50(OTS), .,;*"T$ _...~ -7: . i::

A PROCEDURE FOR THE ACID EXTRACTION AND ANALYSIS OF STRONTIUM 90 IN SOIL. ,,m;“_f Gerald H. Hamada and Edward P. Hardy, Jr.; WITH A RECOZIEXDED METHOD FOR c SOIL SAXPLING. Lyle T, Alexander. Apr. 7, 1958. 32p0 UNCLASSIFIED $6,30(ph OTS); $3.0O(mf OTS).

@JQ=-33 > "<;;

_’ s-j h I--w 1 _L -I ., ““z&_\

ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION FRagI %'EAPOX TESTS, Oct. 1958. 370~. UNCLASSIFIED $3.5O(OTS).

(Iw.L-421,;.c

Included in this report are NYO-4753(Suppl. 2); A/AC.82/G/R; 2353; AERE-HP/R-2354; AERE-HP/M-l%; and NYO-4889, . . _w.-:

‘h

STRONTIUM PROGRAM QUARTERLY SUMMARY. REPORT. Edward P, Hardy, Jr. and.St~l$ Klein, Nov. 19, 1958. (HASL-51) UNCLASSIFIED.

STRONTIUM PROGRAM QUARTERLY SiJX&RY REPORT, Edward P. Hardy, Jr. and Stanl&! Klein. Feb. 24, 1959. 109~. (HAS655) uNcLASs1FIED.

:. .;

f.-~‘_ c’ :% ,i+!

y:*;_y~_j HASL AERIAL SURVEY SYSTEM, M. E. Cassidy, R. T. Graveson, and H. D, LeVin&%$ July 29, 1957. 58~. (NYO-:2071) UNCLASSIFIED &75(OTS), ;:i:,~

;

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY ON LONG RANGE EFFECTS OF FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR EXPLOiI- Allen G. Hoard. Nov. 1957. 23~. (NYO-4753(supp1.2)) uNCL$SSIFIED 80,.76(

_.., -.g@

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY ON LONG RANGE EFFECTS OF FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR EXF%& Allen G. Hoard0 Ott, 1958. 30~. (NYO-4753(Suppl, 3)) uNCLASSIFI:ED $O.&@

" METHOD OF CALCULATING INFINITY GAMMA DCSE FROM BETA MEASUREMENTS ON FILM, Naomi A. Hallden and John H. Harley. UNCLASSIFIED $l.OO(OTS).

Api, 15, 1957, 37~. '. ‘_j

SUMIIARY OF ANALYTICAL RESUL'lS FRO?/1 THE HASL STRONTIUM PROGRAM, JULY moD! DECEI'IBER 1956. John H. Harley, Edward P. Hardy, Jrer 11-a B. Whitney, and Merril Eisenbud. Mar. 15, 11957. 44~. (NYC-4862) UNCLASSIFIED &SS(4

A STUDY OF FALLOUT IN RAIN~ILL COLLECTIONS FROM MARCH THROUGH JULY 1956*; William R. Collins, Jr, and Naomi a. Hallden, Apr. 30, 1957. 27~. (NW UNCLASSIFIED $4.80(ph OTS); $2.70(mf OTS).

THE T. I $1.8

ESlI: Jack

PROGR ATTAC

DISPE; 20p.

-AL _ Qb27.30(;

9

Oak Ridge National Lab., Tenn.

STRO:JTIU&90 AND CESIUM-137 UPTAKE BY VEGETATION UNBER NATURAL CO:?DITIONS. S, I. Auerbach and D. A. Crossley, Jr. 14~. (A/CONF.l5/P/401) UNCLASSIFIED qco.5o(oTS),

Sa.ndia Corp.., Albuquerque, M. Mex.

THE PRCBABII;ITY DISTRJ:BUTIO:$ OF FALLOUT PATTERNS DUE TO WIND VARIABILITY. T. E. VanZandt. Mar. 1, 1957. lop, (AECU-3494; TM-118-57-51) UNCLASSIFIED $1.80(ph OTS); $1.80(mf OTS).

ESTIIJIlLTING SAFETY PROBABILITIES FROM FAUOUT FORECASTS FOR NEVADA TEST SITE. Jack W. Reed. Feb. 1957. 23~. (SC-4073) UNCLASSIFIED $4.80(ph uTS); $2.7O(mf OTS).

PROGRAM FOR COXPUTING PROBABILITIES OF FALLOUT FROXA LARGE-SCALE THER;dONUCW ATTACK. m. W. Bledsoe. Apr. 29, 1957. 64~~ (sc-4109(~2)) u~cmsrnm.

DISPERSAL OF FALLOUT BY XEANS OF A HE&T SOURCE. Kenneth L, Shipley, Mar. 1958. 20~. (SC-4153(TR)) UXCLASSIFI~ #3.30(ph OTS); $2.4O(mf (31s).

FALLOUT FROM A HYPOTHEXCAL l-MT SURFACE BURST AT ALBUQUERQUE. L. J. Vortman. Mar. 10, 1957, 7p. (SCTM-80-57(51); M-6196)) UNCLASSIFIED @.8O(ph OTS); $1,80(mf' W'S).

Utah, Univ., Salt Lake City, Radiobiology Lab.

ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT. Mar. 31, 1957. 177p. (AECU-3522) UNCLASSIFIED $27.30(ph OTS); $8.10(mf OTS).

S%5-ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT. Sept. 30, 1957. 129p. (AEXU-3583) UNCLASSIFIED $19.80(ph OTS); $6.30(mf OTS).

.ANNUAL PRWRESS REPORT. C. N. Stover, Jr., ed. Mar. 31, 1958. 192p.

I

UNCLASSIFIED $28.8O(ph OIS); $8.4O(mf OTS).

SEMI-ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT. C, N. Stover, Jr.; ed, Sept, 30a 1958. (COO-217) $28.80(ph OTS); $8,40(mf OTS).

Vashincton. Univ., Seattle. AnDlied Fisheries Lab.

SURVEY OF RADIOACTIVITY IN THE SEA AND IN PELAGIC MARINE LIFE WEST OF &RSHALL ISLANDS, SEPTEMBER l-20, 1956. Allyn H. Seymour, Edward E. h Frank G. Lowaan, John R. Donaldson, and Dorothy J. South, Mar. 15, 19 (m-47) UNCLASSIFIED &75(OTS),

(cm

184~.

THE :eld, '57. 6

-215)

3Po

Nashington. Univ., Seattle. Applied Fisheries Lab.

RADIOACTIVITY IN THE REEF FISHES OF BELLE ISL&i'l'D EB-IP~TOK ATOLL ApRII_, TO NOVENlBER 1955. Arthur D. nelander. &y 17, 1957. 42~. uXLASSIFIED $1.25(OIS).

(m-49)

LAND CRABS, AND RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT AT EXWETOK ATOLL, Edward E. Held. 1957. 3gp. (XJWL-5,o) UNCLASSIFIED &25(0X'S).

.

TIE OCCURRENCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF RADIOACI'IVE NON-FISSION PRODUCTS IN PI,ANm:; AND &flxAIS OF THE PACIFIC PROVING GROURD. Frank G. Lowman, Ralph F. Palumbo and Dorothy J. South. June 12, 1957. 67~. (UWFE-51) UNCLASSIRED $Z.OO(O

RADIQIICTIvI,TY OF INVERTEBRATES AND OTHER ORGANISXS AT EXIWETOK ATOLL DURING 1954-55. Kelshaw Bonham. Jan. 6, 1958. 55~. $j1.50(0'15).

(IJVWL-53) UliTC~SIRED L ;$ ._ ;A:

.I i’

RADIONUCLIDES IN PLANKTON HEAR THE MARSHALL ISLANDS0 1956. Frank G. Lowman.-- <' Feb. 14, 1958. 34~. (UWFL-54) UNCLASSIFIED sgl.OO(OTS),

RADIOBIOLOGICAL STUDIES OF TBE FISH COLLECTED AT ROXGELAP AND ALCNGINAE A JULY 1957. &thur D. lYelander. Mar. 5, 1958. 33~~ (UWL-55) UNCr&%I $l.OO(OTS).

THE OCCURRENCE OF ANTIMONY-125, EUROPITUM-155, IRON-55, AND OTHER IisDIONUCLID IN RONGELAP ATOLL SOIL, Ralph F. Palumbo and Frank G. Lowman, Apr. 7, 19' 27~. (UWL-56) UNCLASSIFIED $l,OO(OTS).

..:;* -3 .;'-jr; <Q -=z- .,.

Weather Bureau. Oak Ridge Term. and Oak Ridge Operations Office, . . ;+

Research I,:: and Development Div., %3CO

ALIGWENT CHARTS FOR SHAPE PARAXETERS OF ATXOSPHERIC DIFPTJSION AND DEPOSIT10 PATTERNS. Frank Gifford, Jr. Sept. 1958. 8p. 2 illus. ((X0-176) UNCL $0.5O(OTs).

Westinghouse Electric Carp, .Bettis Plant, Pittsburgh.

Air Fc

Atomene

RADIO&Q K* Heyd, IJwlASs;

Atomic E Canada

LEVELS01 Available

Australia Cornmonw~ -Board Atomic E

PRE-OPERATIONAL RADIATION SURVEY OF THE SHIPPINGPORT ATOXIC PmR STATION'I AND SURROUNDING AREA, Jan. 1958. 88~~ (NAPD-CT.A(IH)-208)) UNCLASSI~~':: Qk13,80(ph OTS); $4.8O(mf OTS). -&i- _ __g:;

.?$$j

.

11

Nor,-AEC rj--or-;s At;r I_I-

51; the 3iso DistrLct). 1, 1957. a*+. (3 -6372)

California., Univ., Richmond. Ins%. of Engineering Research.

CcflUTING PROCEDURE FOR DETERXCNING ISO-IBTENSITY AND ISO-DOSE COI\TTOJRS ~IJIJ'ING FxoIvl RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT,, FOR VARIOUS LEVELS OF PROBABILITY. R. (2. Grassi. Jan. 15, 1958. 7op. Project CIVIL. @P-7208) UNCLASSIFIED.

A STL9Y OF RADEF COXXXrICATIOXS, STATE OF CALIFORXA. R. C. Grassi and A, ,J. Gradwohl, April 25, 1958. 58~. (NP-7210) TUNCLASSIFITED.

Chemical Warfare Labs., Army Chemical Center, 1Ld,

DESC,RIPTIOlj OF AERIAL LRADIOLOGICAL SURXZY I~W'RODS. John P. Johnson and ianfred +iorxerthau July :L2, 1957. 14~. (C~~a-21~74)ti ;!!CL&sIFcED.

Project 4-12-10-007-02.

Chicago. UniTTo Enrico Fermi Inst. for Nuclear Studies,

TRITIUX ASSAYS OF ~:AAT;'RAL irATER&> 0 XW3JRED IB 1956-1957. F. Begemann. Dec. 31, 1957" 71p, (AFOSR-TR-58-41; AD-154131) UXLASSIFIED.

Denmark. Atomenergikommis:;ioner~. Forsbgsinstitut, RisbO

lWJIROXri:Zl~~TAL RADIOACTIVIT?~ AT LRIS?,, AI?RIL 1, 19'7 - X&H 31 1958 A. Aarkrog and J. Lippert. June 19581. 1lOp. (m&3) m~cLAss;FIIED.’

Federal Civil Defense Administration, Battle Creek, Rich.

EVALuATIol? OF CIVIL DEFEXE RADIOLOGICAL DEFENSE INSTRULIEXTS, John H. TolaM. Apr. 195'7. 57~. Project 38.3 of OPERATIO3 TEAPOT, ('XC-1190) UNCLASSIFIEI1 1.: $1.75(OTS). @,& , .,$“&.~.

” g3 c

Gt. Brit. Home Office.

ASSESSXEX OF TIiE PROTECT103 AFFOARDD BY BUILDI;JGS AGAIXST GAWA RADIATIOB. FROM FALLOUT. 1967. 18p. (X1-6459) X~CLAS5IFIED.

Kansas. Univ., Lawrence.

TEE XETABOL;TSX OF SrgO,AXD Ygo &"ri> THE I;:FL'JE:[CE OF L&C?ATIO;J QJ RETE:In Frank E. iloecker and EdvTard I. Shavr. 15~. (A/Col;F.l5/F',/l996) U#XASSI $0*50(OTS).

Naval Radiological Defense Lab.o San Francisco.

FALLOUT STUDIES A:'D ASSESSM::~T OF RADIOLOGICAL PHE;TOMEI~AA. Preliminary Report. L. E. Egeberg. No'iro 1957. 39p. Project 32.4 of OPERATION PLZB-BOB. (ITR-1465) UNCLASSIFTI $1.25(OTS).

RADIOTOXICITY RESULTING FROM EXPOSURE TO FALLOST SfMZ&~T, II, THE METABO- LISM OF AN INHALED AND IZGESTED SIMiULANT OF FALLOUT PRODUCED BY A LAND-BASED NUCLEAR DETONATION. S. H. Cohn, W, 13. Lane, J. K. Gong, R. K. Fuller, and W. L. Milne. Jan, 11, 1957. 29~. Project NM 006-015.04. (USNRDL-TR-118) UNCLASSIFIED.

THE RELATIONSHIP OF TIZE OF PEAK ACTIVITY FRO:,1 FALLOUT TO TIME OF ARRIVAL, P. D. LaRiviere. Feb, 2i3, 1957. 15~. (USNRDL-TR-137) UNCLASSIFIED.

A FALLOUT FORECASTING TECHNIQUE TQ-Tii RESULTS OBTAINED AT THE E;Zy$ETOK PROVING GROUND. E. A. Sohuert. Apr. 3> 1957. 67~. Project 1% 081-001. (USBRDL-TR-139) UNCLASS!:FIED.

INVESTIGATION AND CORRELATIO1J OF SOME PHYSICAL P&&:iETERS OF FALLOUT &TERIAL. xJ. Williamson, Jr, Mar. 28, 1957. 4Op. Project ITS-081-001. (USNRDL-TR-152) UNCLASSIFTED.

A TIME OF ARRIVAL DEVICE, K. F. Sinclair. May 14, 1957. 23~0 Project ;Js 088-001. (USNRDL-TR-154) UTJCLASSIFTED.

GLOVE BOX AND ASSOCIATED EQbTP15BT FOR THE REMOVAL OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM HEXCELL COLLECTORS, A. E. Greendale and M. Honma, May 1, 1957, Project NS 088-001. (USNIZ;>L-TR-157) UNCLASSIFIEDo

A METHOD FOR ;,WURING 1VATER CONTENT OF AIR-BORNE SEA-SALT PARTICLES. N. H. Farlow. May 13, 1957. 16~~ Project NS-081-001, (USNRDL-TR-168) UNCLASSII;?E.D.

PHYSICAL, CHEZICAL, AND RILDIOLOGICAL PROPERTIB OF SLUiiRY PARTICULATE FALLOUT COLLECTED DURING OPERATION RELWING. N. H, Farlow and 1y, R. 19p. Project NS 088-001. (USNRDL-TR-1701 UNCLASSIFIED,

E FALLOU A STUDY OF MAXIMUZ PERMISSIBLE CONCENTRATIONS OF BADIOACTIV A!D AIR BASED UPON ?ILITARY EXPOSURE CRITERIA. J. D. Newcoabe. Aug. 27, 1957. 136~~ Project NS 083-001. UNCLASSIFIED,

'T IN ;fATER Teresi and C. L. (USNRDL-TR-182)

'RE 1tiTURE OF INDIVIDUAL RADIOACTIVE FARTICLES. VI. ITmaR SHOT, OPERATION RE%iINGG, C. E, Adams and J. D.

i 19p. (USNRDL-~~-208) UNCLASSIFIED.

b IRE COMPOSITIONSa STRUCTUFES, A:JD ORIGINS OF RADIOACTIVE FA D E. Adams, N, H, Farlow, and D. R. Schell. Feb. 3, 1958.

Schell. May 5, 1957.

FALLOUT PARTICLES FRO;41 A O'Connor. Deco 2, 1957,

.LLOUT PA .RTICLES. 47p. (US:@DL-TR-

A THEORY FOR CLUE-IN FALLOUT. A. D. Anderson. July 23, 19%. 64~0 (USNRDL-TR-249) UNCLASSIFIED.

A WIND-MEASURING SYSTEM FOR TACTICAL FALLOUT PREDICTION, A. Do Anderson and W. E. Strope, Sept. 3, 1958. 28~. (USNRDL-TR-253) UNCLASSIFIED.

PROTECTING AND CLEANING HANDS CONTAMINATED BY SYNTHETIC FALLOUT UNDER FIELD CONDITIONS, R, H. Black. Aug. 27, 1958. 23~. (USNRDL-TR-256) UNCLASSIF~~>.

Naval Research Lab.. Washington, D. C. .

FALLOUT PROTECTTON AFFOFtDEXI BY STANDARD ENLISTED ZEN'S BARRACKS. C. W. Malich and L. A. Beach. Jan. 7, 1957. 23~. Project NY 340-032. UBCLASSIFIED.

(NRL-4886)

ATMOSPHERIC RADIOACTIVITY ALONG THE 80TH MERIDIAN, 1956. Interim Report. L. B. Lockhart, Jr., R. A. Baus, and I. H. Blifford, Jr. May 29, 1957. Projects NR-571-000 and NR-571-003.

16~. (NRL-4965; AD-139007) UNCLASSIFIED.

RADIATION PROTECTION AFFORDED BY BARRACKS AND UNDERGROUND SHELTERS. C. V. Malich and L. A. Beach. Aug. 22, 1957. 48~. Project NY 340-032. UNCLASSIFIED.

(NRL-5017)

Pitt

BRON (A/(x

Polis

@GmJ Repor 9P.

CLOSE-;

NOTE OK 1958.

GWHIC,

Be box.

Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, Oslo.

RADIOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF FALLOUT IX NORXAY, Monthly Communication No. 1. H. Bergh, G. Finstad, L. Lund, 0. Michelsen, and B. Otter. May 1957. 8p. (KIR-175/57) UNCLASSIFIED.

RADIOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF FBLL-OUT IN WORZAY, Monthly Communication No. 2. H. Bergh, G. Finstad, L. Lund, 0. Michelsen, and B. Ottar, June 1957. 9 (KIR-176/57) UMCL&%IFtED.

RADIOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF FLLLOUT IN NOWAY, Monthly Communication No. 3. H. Bergh, G. finstad, L. Lund, 0. Michelsen, and B. Ottar, July 1957. (KIR-177/57) UNCLASSIFIED.

7~e.1.;~;

RADIOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF FALLOUT IN NOmAY. Monthly Communication No. 4. H. Bergh, G, Finstad, L. Lund, (KIR-183/57) UNCLASSIFIED.

0. Michelsen, and B. Ottar. Sept. 1957. 9p

RADIOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF FALLOUT IN NORWAY. Monthly Communication NO. 5, H. Bergh, G. Finstad, L. Lund, (KIR-186/57) IB1CLASSIFIED.

0. Michelsen, and B. Ottar. Oct. 1957. 8p@.

RADIOCH%IICAL ANALYSIS OF FALLOUT IN IJOIWAY, Mont'nly Communication Noa H. Bergha G. Finstad, L. Lund, 0. Michelsen, and B. Ottar.

Jan 1g58 . l 9

(KIR-195/58) UNCLASSIFIED.

15

Pittsburgh. Univ. Graduate School of Public Health.

BRONCHOGENIC CARCINOMA FROM RADIOACTIVE PARTICULATES. Herman Cember. 12~. (A/CONF,15/P/900) UNCLASSIFIED '$0.5O(OTS). ’

Polish Academy of Sciences. Inst. of Nuclear Research> Warsaw,

MEASUREMENTS OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT IN WAR&W, POLAND, DURING THE Report No. 16/X doz. R. Szepke, 2. Gorberg, and E.'Klimaszewska. 9p. (NPL6863) UNCLASSIFIED.

MEASUREMENTS OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT AND AIRBORNE RADIOACTIVITY IN

YEAR 1957. Mar. 1958.

WARSAW AND CRACCXV DURING THE YEAR 1957. 1958. 35~. (NIP-7103) UNCLASSIFIED.

RAND Corp., Santa Monica, Calif.

CLUSE-IN FULOUT. Sept., 30, 1957, 43~. (R-309(RAND)) UNCLASSIFIED.

NOTE ON THE SrgO HAZARD,, Albert L. Latter and Milton S. Plesset. Jan. 31, 1958. 14~. '(RM-1956(R&ND); AD-150658)) UNCLASSIFIED.

GRAPHICAL METHODS FOR THE QUANTITATIVE PREDICTION OF CLOSE-IN FULOUT. Joseph B. Knox. Jan. 31, 1958. 127~. (RM-2108(RAND); AFSVUP-1074)) UNCLASSIFIED.

Rio de Janeiro, Centro Brasileiro de Presauisas Fisicas.

COBALT-60 FROM THERMONUCLEAR TESTS IN THE ATMOSPHERE, Luiz Marquez, Neyla Lea1 da Costa, and Ivone G. de Almeida. May 22, 1958. lop. (Notas de Fisica Vol. IV, No. 6). (NP-7022) UNCLASSIFIED;

RADIOISOTOPES FROM FUSION IN RAIN WATER: co579 Mn5*$ AND Co600 ,L. Marquez, N. L. Costa, and I. G. Almeida, June 4, 1958. 7p. (Notas de Fisica Vol. IV, No. 7). @P-7023) UNCL&SSIFIED.

Stanford Research Inst., Menlo Park, Calif.

SYSTEMS ANALYSIS OF R&DIOLOGICAL DEFENSE, Kendall D. Mall, Nov. 19580 124~. SRI Project No. IU-2324. (NP-7241) UNCLASSIFIED.

A SUGGZSTED PROCEDURE FOR THE COLLECTION OF RADIOACTIVE FALL In A Method for tionthly Collection of kdioactive Fallout. annex 2.

I

The Computation of Infinite Plane 30-Year Doses fr Bo Aler and Carl Johan Herrlander. 1957. 22p0 (NP-6395)

#OUT. Incl udes hex. Kay Edvar son.

'om Radioac 'tive Fallout, UNCLASSIR ED.

I

j

j /,

I

( : j i

.___.. . ..I.%

._. ~. . .._.. .._L.

.:; : . . .::_._ __ . ._ , .

Technical Operations, Inc., Burlington, Mass0

~I()L~ICAL DEFENSE PLANNING GUIDE. PART I. PLANNING ANALYSIS AND PART II. MODEL RADIOLOGICAL, DEFENSE PLANS, Franklin C; Brooks, Callahan, Eric T. Clarke, John F. Batter, and Arthur L. Kaplan, 1958. 346~. Prepared under Subcontract with the Commonwealth of Massachus& Federal Civil Defense Administration. (TOI-58-26) umxmFmr~. & .: :.$ijg

---‘T&$g& L, ;;_4*>

United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, Industrial Group. Nindscale ~orks$'&$$@&

Sellafieid, Cumb., England. - ~~;7&g$gy

P .;I’;.

THE MECHANISM OF ACCUMULATICN OF FISSION PRODUCTS BY FINE PARTICLES AND m:._ 1p ORGANISMS. R. F. Jones and Isabel Batty. Dec. 1957. 11~. (IGR-TNb-75 UNCLASSIFIED Charge @.50(ph); $0.75(mc).

United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. Research Group, Atomic Energy Research-Establishment, %-well, Berks, England.

THE DETER!tiINATION OF LONG-LIVED FALLOUT IN RAINWATER. R. G. Osmond, A. Pratchett, and Jo B. Warricker. Aug. 1957. 23~. (AERE-C/R-2165) UNCLIISSX . .

MEASUREMENTS OF 137Cs IN HUMAN BEINGS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM,, 1956/195: Rundo. Jan. 1958. 5p. (AERE-HP/M-126) UNCLASSIFIED $0,21(BIS). _-_:?j

;; i ” -_

THE HAZARD FROM INHALED FISSION PRODUCTS IN RESCUE OPERATIONS AFTERANAT~ BOMB EXPLOSION, A. C. Chamberlain and G. R. Stanbury, 1951. Decl. $pr...::; 1958. 23~. (AERE-HP/R-737; CD/SA-23) UNCLASSIFIED. ; ,$.,

:

RADIOSTRONTIUM AND RADIOCAFSIUM MEASUREMENT IN BIOLOGICAL MATERIti TO *DEC ,_r,:; 1956, D. V. Booker> F. J. Bryant, A. C, Chamberlain, A. Morgan, and._,Gt,5:_: Spicer, 1957. 11~. (WE-HP/R-2182) UNCLASSIFIED. f - 1 ._,,&$+

‘;? -z . .

RADIOSTRONTIUM IN SOIL, GRASS, MILK A%D BONE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM* ? RESULTS. F. J. Bryant, A. C. Chamberlain, A. Morgan, and G. S. Spioeris3 1957. 33p. (AERE-HP/R-2353) UNCLASSIFIED.

’ .

Woods Ho Mass.

:!&_RINE G; SUgihara,

THE mTORLD-mDE DEPOSITION OF LONG-LIVED FISSION PRODUCTS FROM N-UCL: EXPLOSIONS. N. G. Stewart, R. No Crooks, R, G. D. Os-mond, and E. .M.'-FiBk act, 1957. 3330 (AERE-HP/R-2354) UNCLASSIFI.ED $0.81(BIS). - _;ii ::'J%

-_* - _

RADIOSTRONTIUM IN SOIL0 HEWAGE, ANIMAL BONE AND ZLK SAMPLES FROM

KINGDOM. 1957 RESULTSo F. J, Bryant, A. Morgan, and G. So Spicer*

23~0, (m-HP/R-2730) UNCLASSIFIED $0.49(BIS). 'CT< .I. :-,c, T. i.

LONG RANGE FALLOUT OF RADIOACTIVE XATERIALS FROM NUCLEAR ExpLOSIOI~S.'-$~~ READING LIST. B. J. viilson, camp, Jan, 1958. 7p. UNCLASSIFIED.

(AERE-READING I@j 3%

.’ -’ .& . .;b ,; \”

Uni tee 7

rY001 -

THE DE Pratch UNCJ_&3

United Reset

SAFETY G. C. F

Weather

A METEO. BUCLEAR UNCLASSI

GLOBAL r P/1867)

published Literature

A-BOMBFALLOUTZXZ#R!~WESTVI~IN~e J l Se Allen (Bethany College,:‘. ; Bethany, WestXz.z&af. West Va. Univ. Bull. Ser. 2, 557(1955).

1, I .-:

&SOR~TION m -~=(-Js 0~ sTRON~:~ CAESm BY PLANTS FROM FOLfAR ,':' SPRAYS 0 Le J. ]rs?S:ct;or . Rakse 1.81, 1WO-W(1g58) 0

"jJm ~SOR~II& m wimm cp sTRON!?i~ BY A CALcmOUS SOIL. J. R, McHemy. Agror. Zb. & g(Wy'i').

UC CWCKS m ,-eg m LONG-RANGE EFFECTS OF FALLWT. Business Week 82 .

(1957) Oct. 26.

mc CO-E- FJ~, C&m. Eng. News 2, 4g-!%(lg57) NOV. 4.

AK! l&'SCRImS _~'GHESS 0~ RAXOACTNE FALLOUT AS Eli'?. E. Clark.

Aviation Weekf-, %?(l.g>"; July 22.

AEC REPORTS FAZXZ pi= ~I.ZAR TESTS. Sei. News Letter 3, 345(1g55) ~~ 28.:

mc F&ymy&,s FE mp m IK;ST. Sci. Digest x, Tg(lg55) May.

AIRBORNE ~OFATL~D=@IS' L. Machta, H. L. HamUton, Jr., c 0. F. Hubert, 2, Z. a.&, ad K. M. Na@;ler- J. Meteorol. g (2), 165-75(1957).

AIRBORNE RADIQX!?. E. mima and T. Doke. Scierrce 123, 2xt-l4(1g$) ':

Feb. 10.

m ABOUT A_m,Tfim, ~6~s IN THE FUTURE; EXCE.RPTS FROH HEARfHGS OF :" ~- JOT c0-m ~p~lmc -Y, APRIL 15, 1955* UoS. News World Rept. 2, g6-m(1955) &z. 3.

THE AP~)LEC~I~ s mmc m TO PITCHED ROOFS. A. J. Breslin (U.S. ..- Atomic Energy &y~~~&sfan, New York). PO lgm21 f&& '"THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOGIC& :;: HAZARDSOFAF'AZ&?j~." ~&&on M. Dunning and John A. Hilckea, eds. ..:,?&

;_-; ;:..;<;2 Washin&on, A-= htm C~~SS~O~ - Dwahent rf pe~en@=, 19% 2%~. ~._:~$~ @.75(GPO) . ;, .i@

AS THE WINDS BZX. &mek g, 65@956) Sept. 240 .:~yp&.y :::.$jfg

-- C.&g

OF C-14 COmT OF THE ATMOSPHERE m ;+$?$

ATOM BOMBEFFEK_ 2&z!!xT1N~ '?@ BIOSPHERE. T, A. m&r and 3. J. Fergussone Sefence 5 555-8(1957).

ATOM BOm m : g6(m mw IN THE CmN-14 cO2~ OF TBB ATE(IosP~RE, BI+_~:, m SU~+AC!E WATER OF THE OCEANS. T. A. Rafter and G. J. Fergusso+ J- Zeawd 3. Sci. Techno 2, @'l-@(lg57).

ATOMTESTS SAZZ. z-i,% News 2ster '& 115(1957) A~tge 24.

AT .m He

AT{ Pul

AT(

ATC *

AT0

BAN

BAS.

BAS: June

BAFU and

BEHA WorL

ON T: BY PZ from Lenir

BIG E PRESI

3IOLC 1. V,

)OMB :

lOMBS

ONE c

IOKS; ?wman

19

ATOMIC BOMB EFFECT: VARIATION OF RADIOCARBON IN PLANTS, sHE%s, AND SNAILS IN THE PAST FOUR YEARS. He de Vries (Natuurkundig Laboratorium, Groningen, Netherlands). Science 128, 250-l(l958) Aug. 1. .-

ATOMIC ENERGY ANID AGRICIJLTURE. C. L. Comar, ed, Am. Assoc. Advance. Sci., Publ. No, 49, Washington D.C. (1957)

ATOMIC FALLOUT AND GAME, A. Grahame. Outdoor Life 120, 25(1957) Oct.

ATOMIC LIGHT ON THE DESERT AhIR ANSWERS TO FEARFUL QUESTIONS PEOPLE ASK. Newsweek 3, 30-l(1955) Mar. 21.

ATOMS IN THE DAIRY IhTDUSTRY. W. J. Harper. Am. Milk Rev. & 24-6(1957) June.

BAN THE DIRTY BOMB. 9 Republic 136, 3-4(1957) Apr. 29,

BASIC FACTS ABOUT FALLOUT. D., 0. Woodburyo Readergs Digest '& 51-5(1958) Sept.

BASIC HEALTH PHYSICS. D. E. Barnes, Nuclear Power g9 No. 14, 15, 16, 250-3(1957) June; 294-7(1957) July; 325-8(1957) Aug.

BARIUM-140 RADIOACTIVITY IN FOODS. E. C. Anderson, R. L. Schuch, W., R. Fisher, and M0 A. Van Dilla. Science 127, 283-4(1958) February:. ---

BEHAVIOR OF RADIOACTIVE ZONTAM.INATION IN THE GROUND. Co B, Amphlett. World Crops 2 (3), 112-5(1957) March.

ON THE BEHAVIOR OF RADIOACTIVE FISSION PRODUCTS IN SOIL. THEIR ABSORPTION BY PL,ANTS AND THEIR ACCUMULATION IN CROPS. V, M. Klechkovsky, ed. Translated from a Publication of the Academy of Sciences, UoS.S.RO (1956). (MOsCOW- Leningrad). 193'. 227p. Washington D,C. (AE:C-tr-2867)

BIG SCARE THAT EXPLODED; CLEAN BOMBS; WITH EXCERPT FROM PRESS CONFERENCE BY PRESIDEN?I EISENHOWER, U*,S. News World Rept e bJp 22-6(1957) July 5. --

BIOLOGICAL CONCENTRATION BY KILLER CLAMS OF COBALT-60 FROM RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Ho V0 Weiss and W. H. Shipman. Science zb 695(1957) Apr. 12,

BO_MB WATCHERS; RADIOACTIVE DUST IN JAPAN. Time 67, 56(1956) Apr. 16. --

BOMBS. Commonweal66, 30(1957) Apr. 12.

BONE CANCER FROM TESTS. Sci. News Letter 72, 150(1957) Sept, 7.

BONE AND RADIOSTRONTIUM. Arne Engstr~m, Rolf Bjgrnerstedt, Carl-Johan Clemedson, and Arne Nelson. New York, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1958. 139p.

BOOKS; FGUR APPROACHES TO THE PROBLEM OF PREVEXTING A THIRD WORLD WAR. J. R. Newman. Sci. American 200, 155-6(1959) Feb- _a_

-IN OF THE ATMOSPHERIC RADIOACTIVlTY. NHMBERS a-8 FOR APRIL, 1955 ; ;.1-~~~~~ WOUGH MARCH, 1957.. Tokyo, The Japan Meteorological Agency, 1955.57. ~~'%~~~~*-;;,~ . ..%&*> v.%=> 37@. (In English and Japanese)

__{_,_i & z $ ‘>.*_ f”-‘r. _-I .d> :_.,2.*+ , .~:: .-< I

ERILLF;TIR OF THE ATMOSPBERIC RADIOACTIVITY. NUMBER 9 FOR APRIL-JUNE, 1957. :.&!;-.-;-; Tokyo, The Japan Meteorological Agency, 1957. 92p. (In English and Japane&)s;f,z:,

~L,LETJN OF TH&X'MOSPHERIC RADIOACTIVITY. NUMBER 10 FOR JHLY-SEPTEMBER, '. :+'j-

19579 Tokyo, The Japan Meteorological Agency, 19%. 101~. (In English and Japanese)

;c

c@J3ON-14 IN FALLOUT. sci. American 200, 6%3(1gs) January. . :

oAlJSES- OF WORLD WAR THREE, Cu.-W. MU.&. REVIEW;, , J. Ei, Newman. Sci, I.

heridan 200, 155-6(X959) Feb, ~ -" ..,, ;:i ; .: :

CHEMICAL PROBLEMS IN THE REMOVAL OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT--REVIEW OF PROCESSES 1::. ,, DEVELOPED TO DATE. Reinhart Winkler (Zentral inst. Kernphys., Dresden, i_ -. GSrmanY) l

Chem* Tech. (Berlin1 l0, ll-16(1958). ,-_y. <. z:$ .s_ :i.,

CITY DWELLERS SAFER FROM ATOMIC FALLOUT. 8ci. Digest 2, 75(1957) June..

Sci. News Letter '& 184(lg57) ~ar.$; . . _Q_ :

: +-_

CLEAN BOMB HERE? Chem. Eng. News z9 32(195'j') July 8. I

CLEANING THE MONSTER. gewsweek zp 48(1g57) July 1, ;+ .:,TT .,;-‘: :.7

CASE-INFALLOUT. W. W. Kellogg, R. R. Rappo and S. M. Greenfield (RAND C Santa Monica, Calif.). J. Meteorol. &, No. 1, l-8(1957) February.

CLOUDS FROM NEVADA. P. Jacobs. key 16. z '

Reporter l6, lo-29(1957) May 16; &+ :

COLLECTION OF ATOMIC BOMB DEBRIS FROM THE ATMOSPHERE BY IMPACTION ON SC I. H. Blifford, Jr. and others. Science 123, U.20-1(1g56) June 22.

COMING CLEAN; CHRISTMAS ISLAND TESTS. Economist 1839 6’p(lg57) my 25.

COMPiiRATrvE MGTABOLISM O?? STRONTIUM-89 AND CALCIUW45 BY BONE GROWTH*m.VPrf. F. W. Lengemann. Proc. Sot. Exptl. Biol. Med. 94, 64-6(1g57). -2.

-_

COMPUTE FALLOUT PATTERN. Sci. News Letter 2, n(lg56) Feb. 4.

s CONDENSATION OF A VAPOUR TO AN ASSEMBLY OF DROPLETS OR PAETICLES. g. Stewart (Atomic Energy Research-Establishment,

'14

-ens. Faraday Sot. ~$5 161.73( Harwell, Berks., England).2

COIfGRESSIONAL HEARINGS ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Co Holifield. Bull. Atomid; i&s 2, 52-4(19!%) January. -.;!z .9;_-

ON I u

CON!l J. I

ON 'I COK7 go&

CONT. Beck,

THE ( Bull.

Atomi 945-6

Rieta

DATA( 68705

J.S.S. c. CE )ccupa

'ATING

ECONTL . F. E

GREE STS.

POSIT: BUNI!

?EINI %xJIcL lt. ,E

21

ON THE CONiZIEWENCES OF RADIOAClfIVE Srgo FALLOUT. A. V. Lebedinskii. E. Radial. 2, No. 5, 22-33(1957) Sept.-Ott, (In Russian)

CONTAMINATION OF FOOD BY FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS; ABSTRACT ABD DISClJSSION. J. Hawthorn. Chem. and In& 40%3(1958) April 5.

ON THE CONTAMINATION OF SEEDLINGS AT NURSERY BY SOME RADIATION SUBSTANCES C0HTAINED INRAxQFALL* T. Shidei, S. Okada, and K. Yoshikawa. Jap. Forestry Sot. J. z(5), 183-4(1957)-.May, ’

CQJTROL OF AIR IONIZATION A& ITS BIOLCGICAL EFFECTS. W. W. Hiclss,and 3. C. Beckett* Trans. Am. Inst. Elec. Engrs. '& Pt. 1, NO. 30, 108-ll(lg57) May.

em CONTROL OF RADIOACTIVITY IN AIR AND IN WATER IN SWITZERLAND. 0. Jaag. Bull. schweiz. Akad. med. Wlss, 14, No. 5-6, 398-4o1(1958). PI- L

CURRENT RESEARCH FINDINGS ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Willard F. Libby (U.S. Atomic Energy COmIUiSSiOn, Washington). g&j-62(1$@) Dec.

Proc, ,Natl. Acad. Sci. (U.S. j 42,

CURRENT STRONTIUM-90 LEVEL IN DIET IN UNITED STATES. J. Laurence Kulp and Rieta Slakter.. SC~XXZ& l~8~,@5-6(1958) JUT@ ii. I-

bER, STRONTIUM-90. Newsweek 48, 88(1956) Nov. 12. ---

TA ON ATOMIC RADIATION TRANSMITTED TO U.N. COMMITTEE. U.S. Dept. State Bull. 17(1956) Oct. 29.

,S,S.R:ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCE. DATA ON TCXICITY OF RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS: CESIUM, STRCNTIUM, RUTHEPJNIM, AND RADON. Institute of Sanitation and L

:cupational Disease, Akad. Nauk S.S.Si;R. (1957). --

g.!m OF PAST %INDERED BY WEAPONS TESTS. Sci. News Letter 68, 358(1955) Dec. :

CCNTAMINATION REACTIONS OF SYNTHESIZED FALLOUT DEBtiS FOR NUCLEAR DETONATIONS. F. Miller and others. J. Co-id Sci. 3, 337.57(1958) Aug.

8(1958) Nov. 22. RADIOACTIVITY IN FIVE YEARS. Sei. News Letter 2,

GREE OF HAZARD TO HUMANITY FROM RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR WEAPONS STS. W. F. Libby. Bull. Atomic Scientists l2, 206-7(1957).

~SlTIOrr OF STRONTIUM-90 AND ITS CONTHNT INVEGETATION~ INHUMANDIET IN E UNITED KINGDOM. R. Scott Russell. Nature 182, 8%9&H3~ SepB. 27.

$ EINFUJSS IONISIERENDER STRAHLEN AUF DEN MENSCHLICHEN ORGAMISMCJS UKll DIE TEN EINES STRAHLENSCHUTZES. H. J. Melching. Elektrotechnische

;. ,Ed. A)_ 2, No, 2, 36-4(1957) Jan. 11.

i.

22

DETECTION OF .MANGANESE-54 IN PDIOACTIVE FALLOUT. William He Shipman, Philip S&none, and Herbert V. Weiss. Science 126, 971-2(1957) Nov. 8. .

DETERMINATION OF Sq" AND Ba 14.0 IN BONE DAIRY PRODUCTS, VEGETATION, AND SOa..,

H;‘~L. Volchok, J. E. Gaetjen, J. L. Kulp, and We R. Eckelmann. Ann,, N.Y. Acad. Sci. 2, 293-304(1957) Aug. 28,

--

DETERMINING ARRIVAL TIME OF RADIOACTIVE F&LOX?; GEIGER-COUNTER DETECTION CIRCUiT CAUSES'CLOCK TO STOP. 69-7l(lg58) Aug. 1.

R. W. Farmer and 0. Reiner, Jr. E&ctronics 31,

DIEI'ARY CALCIUM LEVELS AEuD RETENTION OF RADIOSTRONTIUM IN THE GROWING RAT. R. H. Wasserman. Science 126, 1180-~(1957) Dec. 6. _-

DIFFUSION AND DEPOSITION IN RELATION TO REACTOR SAFETY PROBLEMS. M. E. Smith and I. A. Singer. Am. Ind. Hyg. Assoc. Quart. l&(4), 319-3O(l_957).

"DIRT" FROM "CLEAN" BOMB.3. &i. News Letter '& 3(1957).

DISSEMINATION OF AIRBORNE PARTICLES BY EXPLOSIVES. T. C. Helvey. World Health Organization Bull, 36(l), 225-7(1957).

--

DISTRIBUTION AND EFFECTS OF FALL-OUT. W. F. Libby* Bull. Atomic Scientists 2, 27-30(199) Jan.

THE DISTRIBUTION OF RADIOACTIVITY FROM RAIN. Lloyd R. Setter and Conrad P. Straub. Trans. Am. Geophys. U z., 451-8(1958) June.

DUST TRANSPORT OVER DUS!!?f SURFACES. H, Fortak. Z. Meteorol. ll(l)iI 19-27(1957). 5' '

THE EFFECTS OF FALLOUT RADIATION ON THE SKIN. Robert A, Conard (Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, N.Y.). p* 135-42 in "THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOXCAL HAZARDS OF A FALLOUT FIE:;D." Gordon M, Dunning and John A, Hil&en:, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy ConaaSssfon-Department of' Defense, 19% MP~

$1.75((m A + i

!L'B EF'FECTS OF IRJCLEAEI WEAPONS. Samuel. Glasstone, ed- June 1957* 587~. $2.00(GPO)

_.._I .'._i-.: .- Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. #Chalk River Project, Chalk River, Ont. NMERGENCY RADIATION MONITORING OF DRINKING WATER. G.W.C. Tait and W. F. T i-f?-; Merritt. act, 1957. 2Op. (CRHP-733; AECL-505) Health Physics I_~ 1_64-68(1PB;~~'

,i ENGINEERING APPROACH TO RADIOLOGICAL CONTAMINATIONr M. 8, Hawkins. Mech, '-:::1'? > .I =.

j$?& 2, 920-l(1957) Oct. _ .-,L_~$_1 ;Ez. y$ j ._ .

ENGINEERING APPROACH TO RADIOLOGICAL DECONTAMINATION. M. 13. Hawkins. Am. $&, I _+

Sot. Mech. Engrs. Paper. No. 57-SA-52 for meeting June P-13, lP57- 7P7 . r.;>i’-<L ...,;:.\ : ,i’;yy

i _ -i_,_ . __~:L

Ev of&

Ex SC

AN OF

FA(

FAC Rea

FAC

FAL

FAL

FALI

FALI

FALI

FA.% Admi

FALL Rose

FALLi

FALM HEAR: Jan,

FALLC

FALLC

FALL0

FALLO-

FALL01 46-7(.

23

EVALUATION OF GUMMED-PAPER COLLECTORS USED IN D -G RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Jan Rosinski. Trans. Am. Geophys. Union 38, 857~63(1957).

EXCERPTS FROM STATEMENT, APRIL 23, 1957, WI!tE REPLY BY W. F. LIBBY. A. Schweitzer. Reporter l.6, 26--7(1957) May 16.

AN EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE EFFECT OF AIR POLLUTION OM THE INITIATION OF RAIN. R. Gunn and B. B. Phillips. J. Meteorol. I& 272~80(1957).

FACT AND FABLE OF FALLOJT. I,. Pauling. Nation I%, 537-42(1@8) June 14.

FACTS ABOUT A-BOMB FALLOUT. U.S. News World Rept. 2,-21i6(1955) Mar. 25; Reader's Digest 66, 22-4(1955) June. .-

FACTS ABOUT FALLOUT. New Republic m, 13-16(1957) July 1.

FALLOUT. Sci. American z, 46(1955) April.

FALLOUT. Sci. American x, $-8(1957) Aug.

FALLOUT AND CANDOR. R. E. Lapp. Bull. Atomic Scientists ll, 170(1955) May.

FALLOUT DANGER INNORTH. 9. News Letter a, 23(1958) Jan. 11.

FAILOUT DEBATE GOES ON. El. Sevareid. Reporter l6, 26(1957) June 27.

FW:< I. %~U~@?&%&!&~E& Civil~Defenae s

Administration. U. S. Go;ernmeni Printing &f&e. June 1957.

FALLOUT DOSAGES AT WASHINGrON~ D.C. 9. H. Blifford, Jr. and H. B. Rosenstock. Science 123, 61g-Z,@$t$ April 13. -i- .-

FALLOUT FEVER. E. C. Pollard. Atlantic Monthly 200, 27-32(1957) Aug.

FALLOUT FROM A BOMBING CAMPAIGN: EXCERPTS FROM THE 1957 CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS. W. W. Kelloggs and C. Shafer. Bull. Atomic Scientists l.& s-61(1958) Jan.

FALLOUT

FALLOUT

FALLOUT

HAZARD; AN ERRATUM. J. Arnold. Bull. Atomic Scientists I-& 52(1955) Feb.

HAZARD TO GROW; STRONTIUM-90. Sci. News Letter z, ll5(1957) Feb. 23.

HEARINGS MAY HIT A-PLAFJT HAZARDS. Elec. World 147, 72(1957) June 10.

IN LOS ANGELES. Time 72, 30(1958) Nov. 10. -- / FALLOUT

FALLOUT MAY SOLVE SEA MYSTERY; ABSTRACT. T. T. Sugihara. 46-7(1958) April 21.

Chem. EBB. News

-. _... . . -.___._ 1 -_ ,

.z.:.

Fm MINED,? sci. News Letter 709 66(lg56) Aug. 4. PM -

FALtotr~ ()N THE VEGETATION CF NEW ENGLAND DURING THE 1957 ATOM BOMB TEST SERIES. ‘-:; _,c.

F. H. BoI'mannt Paul R. Shafer, aad David Mulcahy. Ecolom B. 376~8(1g58), '.:...:z -fl -, I_

Sci. News Lettz 9, 36(1g56) Jan. 21. ; .-

Fma PATTERNS. ji

Fm NEAR NEVADA TEST SITE. N. Bauer. Science 128, 40(1g58) July 4. , -....

Fm PREDICTOR MAPS DANGER ZONE. Popular Sci. 9 72(1956) July. :

Fm PROBLEM; AN EXAMPLE OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN THE mJANCES OF scm AND THE CONDITIONS OF SOCIETY. B. Commoner. Science I.2 , x123-6(1958); my WITH REJOINDER. E. C. Anderson. Science 1.28, 5-g . -- 3f

FALLOUT PROB= FOR PHOTCGRAPHIC INDUSTRY. ,Business Week 27-8(lg57) June 22.

Fm PROBLEM; RADIOACTIVITY IN WATER AND QR POSES PROBLEXS FOR PEmR/,priIC PAPER MAKERS. Business Week 27-8(1957) June 22.

FAIJ.BUT* RADIATION HAZARDS FROM NUCIZAR EXPLOSIONS. Revised edition -.

including a report on the Windscale Disaster and an analysis of,the United State8 congress report on Radioactive Fallout and its effects in Man. .

A. Piriot ed- London, MacG:ibbon and Kee, 1958. 176~. ‘, --:*:

Fm AND RADIATION HAZARDS EXPEHTS DISAGREE. Chemo Ew. News 2, 16-g(lgp7). ~:. I

Fm ~IOACTIVITY IN A DEER'S ANTLERS. J, Hawthorn and R. B. Duckworth. -’

Nati_ 182, W4(W%) .NOv* 8. ..;I z .,- -;_

Fm REDUCED. U.S. News World Rept. 419 8(lg56) Oet, lg. i, ,. , _

Fm m RICE CONTAMINATION IN JAPAN, I. Ogawa,

35-8(3958) Jan0 Bull. Atomic Scientists &; :

.:;:; ;I-

Fw ANIl THE STRONTIUM-90 HAZARD. I. L. Ophel. Science x, 5gg(lg57) --:'- Mar. 1,.

li'~w~L CONTINUE. Sci. News Letter 2, 15l(lg58) Sept. 6. --

FIM) m DANGER IN RADIOACT:MZ FAIUWT. Sci. Bews Letter z, 328(lgn) Nov.'

U.S. ccwI'e=* FIRST SESSION ON "THE NATURE OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOtJT AD ITS lpFJ3cfs ON MAN," PART 1, May 27, 28, 29, June 3# 1957; Part 2, June 4., 5, 6, 7, #57; Part 3# Index; 1958. Hearim3gs before the Special Subcommittee Radiation, Joint COmittee Oil Atomic Ener@;y,

FOR Ts FIRST TIME m MAN'S HISTORY. D. ThOmp‘tXUL ‘L&i&s HOme J. ‘&

1

FOR Aug.

m: 1222

te%MMf and (

GAMW K. SC

GEmEl U83-

GLIMP

GLOBA: 233-5

GLOB&

GLOBAI sci. B

GLOBAL

GREAT

msTH

HAZARD:

ON THE Leipunf

H-BOBp

H-BOMB

A HIGH- L. Taba lOl-g(1

HISTOLQ J. R. H 5P*

:goR A UNITED NATIONS STUDY OF NUCLEAR FALLOUT. Christian Century 72, 963(19 Ias 24.

~RE RADIATION DOSAGE FROM WEAPON TESTS. D. R. Inglis. Science 127, ,oe2-7(1958) May 23.

: z)AMMA RmWIO N FROM SOME SWEDISH FOODSTUFFS. R. M. Sievert, S. Gustafsson, ‘-ad c, G. Rylander. Arkiv Fysik l2, 481-p (1937). ? iGAMMA SPECTRA OF THE RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM THE ATMOSPHERE. W. Herbst and

~ommermeyer~ Natqtissenschaften 44, 392(1957). (In German)

&BNETIC AND SOMATIC EFFECTS OF CARBON-14. L. Pauling. Science & ,1~%_6f1958) Nov. 14.

.“,-- \-- _ ,

iOL~ INTO HELL; LUCKY DRAGON. Newsweek% 78(1958) Jan. 13.

;GmaAL DISTRIBUTION OF RADIOACTIVITY FROM NUCLEAR DETONATIONS. @j3&9?7) Feb. 8,

wincer 203

a~~ DISTRIBUTION OF RADIOACTIVITY FROM NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS WITH SPECIAL ~RENCE TO STRONTIUM. M+. E$senbud. J. Wash. Acad. Sci. klo 180.-8(1957).

K)BAI, DISTRIBUTION OF STRONTIUM-90 FRGM NUCLEAR DETONATIONS. M. Eisenbud. ct. MonthQ 84, 237-@1(1957).

~BAI, FALLOUT. R. E. Lapp. Bull. Atomic Scientists ll, 339-43(X,55) Nov.

AT DEBATE OPENS. N.. Cousins. Saturday Review 40, 24(1937) June 15. x

w THE U.S. DEVELOPED CLEAN BOMBS? Sci. Digest 40, 62(1956) Oct.

~ZARDS FROM FALLOUT. A. M. Brues. Metal Progr. '& l20(1958) Nov.

iTHE_ S OF RADIATION FROM CONTINUOUS NUCLEAR BOMB TESTS. 0, I. . $m&ii. Atomnaya-Energ; k. 63-70(1958) Jan. (In Russian)

&MB CQNTAMINATION. Sci. News Letter aB 134(1935) Feb, 26. :;

&MB $‘A&om FOUND WORLD-WIDE. Sci, News Letter '& 2O5(lp56) Sept. 29.

;HIGH-SPEED COMPUTER FOR PREDICTING RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT, J. H, wright, ; Ta;ba&, and H. K. &ram&ad. J, Research Natl. Bur. Standards s9

BOLOGIC STUDIES OF SOME REACTIONS OF SKIN TO FUDIAdT THEXML EXISRGY. z R. Hinshaw. Am. Sot, Me&, Engrs. - Paper 57-SA-21 for meeting June 9-13

.

25

55)

&

5 .,_._..._ _- --..-..- . _ _.-, . . . . . * :,,. __-

HOT

HOT

HOW

HOW

HOW

A,NTIXRS. Time 72, 67(lg?8) Nov. 17. -- ‘: _ ..-._ ,._._f ;-;._

‘; ‘ _ -; .;: :I i_:_ : _:_ CLAMS. ~lme 3, 60(1957) km. 29.

a_ '.';I..' -, . . i

DANcX.EKIUS AREi THE E#MB TESTS? Time 2, 62(1957) June 3. -:. ,~

- DANGEROUS IS FALLOUT? C. B. Hicks. P'opular Me&. , 97-100(1956) Nov; :

DANGEROUS 1S'RADIOACT:NE F&LOUT? W. F. .Libbg and L. Pauling. Foreign policy Bull. 2, 148-5x(1957) Jiane 15. I

HOW THE H-BOMBS SPPJZAD RADIOACTIVITY. A. P, Armagnac. Popular Sci. 166, 144-5(1955) Apr.

HOW TO TEST AND PURIFY WATZR CONTAMINATED BY RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM ATOMIC WEAPONS. Municipal Utilities 2zp 23(1957) M&r.

RuMANITARIAN BOMBS; -WIDESPREADFALLOEjT. New Republic 13_5, 3-4(1956) July 30.

HUMANITARIAN H-BOMB. R. 13. Lapp. Bull. Atomic Scientists l2, 261-4(19$) Sept.

HYDROGEN BOMB WARNING. Senior Scholastic 66, X3(1955) Mar. 2.

IF YOU'RE STILL WONDERING ABOUTFALGOUT DANGER; ANSWERS FROMNATIONALACADEMX OF SCIENCES AND BRITISH MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL. U.S. News World Reg. 42, 46-8(1957) June 21.

IMMEDIATE RADIATIONS FROM NUCLEAR DETONATIONS.. Cordon M. Dunning. 3'. Wash. Acad. Scio 9, 189~95(195'7). .

INCREASED ATMOSPHERIC RADIOACTIVZTY IN THE IQETBERLANDS AFTER THE WINDSCALE ACCIDENT. Joh. Blok, R. H. Dekker, and C. J. H. Lock. Appl. SC%. Research '& w-2(1958) l ;I

THE INFLUENCE OF ATOMIC EXPLOSIONS ON ME2EOROLCGICAL PROCESSES. E. K:. Fedorovi'.:-- J. Nuclear Enera 2, 13$@(19~7). : * -:,. ; ,, & ; :;_ := THE INFLUENCE OF ISOTOPIC AND NOpTISCfl9PIC CARRIERS ON THE BEHAVIOR OF

: .. -z

STRONTIUM-90 IN THE RAT. A. Cats&. Experientia 2, 312.13(1957). _ c .’

:I:‘: -$.:-:.c

THE INFLUENCE OF RADIOACTIVE DUST ON E mAI, pNEuMocONIOSIS. K. Watanabe~~~~,~ Tbhoku J. Exptl, Med. 66,,Nq. 2, .131-43(X957).

,.. L . i .;“__‘:B ; -__,?~‘.;:,i _ _ .;-

INHALATION AND RETENTION C?F SIMULATED RADIOACZ'fVE F@OUT. BY MICE. 5:. STUDY -&?J OF ASIMULANT OF FALLCUTFROIdNUCLEAR DETON&'IONUNDm SEAWATER. Stanton Hqi~~;~~$

Cohn, William B. Lane, Joseph K:. Gong, John Co Sherwin, a@ Walter L. Milne; ;_z;;:_Zz: Arch. Ind. Health &, 333-4oI,l956) Oct. ’ =;-. .r_.*..-- ei -..< .’ .; . . . . . k,.->- J

IN9 THE I. (2)

INT Nat o? Ato

INV Klal

IOD: 597.

IODi Mid6

ISSU

No.

LAS: s

LATE:

LETn REPLY

Carru

LIFE :

LIMIT 2590:

LIMITS Scient

LOCAL1

LONG-I Mackio

27

INTAKE OF RADIOACTIVE FISSION PRODUCTS BY PLANTS AND THEIR ACCUMULATION IN THE CROP DURING THE APPLICATION OF LIME, HUMUS, AND POTASH TO THE SOIL. I. V. Guliakin and E. V. Iudintseva. Timiryazev. Sel'skokhoz. Akad. Izvest. (2), 121-400957) l

INTERNAL DOSE FROM SHORT-LIVED RADIONUCLIDES. Karl 2. Morgan (Oak Ridge National Lab., Term.). of a Fallout F&d."

p.149-60 fn “The Shorter-Term Biological Hazards Gordon M. Dunning and John A. Hilcken, eds. Washington,

Atomic Energy Commission - Department of Defense, 1958. 236~. $1675(GPO)

INVESTIGATION OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Walther Gerlach, I$se Zeising, and Klaus Stierstadt. Atomkern-Energie -- 2, 438-4j(ig57) Nov.-Dec. (In German)

IODINE-131FALGOUT IN BOVINE FETUS. L. Van Middlesworth. Science 128, 97-8(199) Sept. 12.

IODINE-131 IN SHEEP BEFORE AND AFTER A NUCLEAR REACTOR ACCIDENT. L. Van Middlesworth. Nature 1.81, 2$(1958). ”

ISSUE OF FALLOUT. M. Amrine. Current History 22, 22x-6(1957) Oct.

LARGE EXPLOSIONS AND ATMOSPHERIC PHENOMENA. ,A: Kh. Khrgian. Priroda 46, No. 3, 31-7(1957) Mar. (In Russian)

LB

LAS LESIONES PRODUCIDAS POR LAS RADIACIONES, J. Lucas Gallego. Rev. cienc. apl. (Madrid) ll, No. 58, 385~.92(1957) Sept.-Oct.

LATESTFALLOUT REPORT. Sci. News Letter +& I_l_8(1956) Aug. 25.

LETTER FROM THE EAST. E. B. White. New Yorker & 198-202(19$) Nova 3.

LETTUCE AND LOGIC. G. W. Johnson. New Republic l& 8(1957) June 10; REPLY WITH REJOINDER, D. S. Saund, New Republic m9 3(1957) July 29.

LEVELS OF STRONTIUM-90 IN CANADA TO MAY 1956. W. E. Grummitt and E. P, Cart&hers. Atomic Energy Can. Ltd., Chalk River Project, No. 678, 3p. +(1958).

Y

LIFE WITHTHEFAILOUT. Newsweek 49, 104(1957) June 10.

LIMIT NUCLEAR TESTING; SCIENCE SERVICE GRAND JURY POLL. Sci. News Letter 70, 259(1956) Oct. 27.

--

LIMITATION OF FISSIONABLE MATERIAL IN WEAPONS. A. S. Pinke. Bull. .Atomic Scientists I& 177-8(1957).

LOCALIZED DEATH? Commonweal 64, 434(1955) Aug. 3. - _-

LONG-LIVED COBALT ISOTOPES OBSERVED IN FALLOUT, Peter 0. Strom, James L. Mackin, Douglas Macdonald, and Paul E. Zigman. Science 128, 417-lg(l958) Aug. 22.

-__ : . . :_ .__.. :. ..I :-. . . _

_- . .

LONG-TERM FALLOUT. Merril Eisenbud and John HI Harley. Science 128, 399-402 (1958) Aug..22.

MAGNITUDE OF BIOLOGICAL H&ZARD FROM STRONTIUM-90. H. B. Newcombe. Science 126, 549-51(1957)*

$ MAKE SYNTHETIC,FALLOHT. &A. News Letter 2, 198(1957) Mar- 30.

BIARSW ISLAND;; FORTUITOUS FAWXJT. Time 2, 18(1957) July 8. 1

I%lTBEMATICAL AIDS INTHw&RsTANDR?G OF THE BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS OFRESIDUAL RADIATION. James T. Breman (Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington). p. 127-33 2 "THE SHORTER.-TERM BIOLOGICAL HAZABDS OF A FALLOUT FIELD." Gordon M. Dunning and ~ohvl A. Hilcken, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy

’ Commission - Department of Defense, 1958. 236p. &75(GPO).

MEASURED FALLOUT; CONTROL OF FALLOUT. Time 68, 61&W July 30.

MEAsuRFMEmT OFARI!IFICIAI_, RADIOA.CTIWCY INTHE ATMOSPHERE AT OTTAWA,CANADA. F. Terentiuk. Can. J. Phys. 36, 13699(1958) Jan.

MEASUREMENT OF A!@~)s~BERIC RADIOACTIVITY. Jacques Franeau and Robert Quivy. Pubis. assoc. ingrs. fat. polytech. Mom NO. 4, l-9(1957)=

mm OFTRERADIOACT~IT~ OFTHE: AIR IXJRING ASEAVOYAGE TO AUSTRALIA. S. Skorka. Atomkern-Energie 2, 182-6(1958) May. (In German) ,

I'B=ING TAE H-BOMB BY JAPANESE. mg, &(19!% July 2.

MEMORANDUM ON -NS TESTS AND pEAcEFvL USES OF THE ATOM. U.S. Dept. State Bull. z, ?'o6-9(1g$) Nov. 5.

MEN WHO REALLY KNW ABOUT BOMB-IKJST RADIATION: J. Poling. Better Homes and .-~.$:-i Gadem 35, n(19n) my. *,“I‘; .I _I.. ? METEOROLOGICAL FACTOR AFFECTING SPREAD OF RADIOACTIVITY FROM NUCLEAR BOMBS. '1.. T. Machta. Jo Wash. Acad. Sci.,3, 169-P(1957) l

~ ;;<.=t ..;‘_A-:

METEOROLOGY-FAILUJT AND WEATHERING. Lester Machta and Kenneth M. Nagler ., (U.S. Weather Bureau, Washington). p.3-11 in "THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLCGIUAL ,‘--'-;+ HAZARDS OF A FACU3uT FIELD." Gordon M. Dun&g and John A. Hilcken, edru r.' -'1 . __.b Washington, Atomic Energy Cor&.ssion-Department of Defense, 1958. 236~. ‘.

@.75(GPO) :

.:

MAXIMUM PERMISSIBLE INTERNAL I)&33 OF RADIONUCLIDES: RECENT CHANGES IN VALUES. K. Z. Morgan. Nuclear Sci. Ens;. & No. 60 477-500(1956) Dec.

MICE,MEN,ANDFAUOUT. THE ~~TENTI/&DANGEROF STRONTIHM-90 THE BASIS OF DATA FROM A~J~MAL'FxPERIMENTS. Miriam PO Fin&l. 637-41(1958) Sept. 19.

Is APPRAISED ON :I. Science 128, -- ::

r

MC R.

MO

Mu

MO

MO; Ju:

THf ani

m

NE% Ame

NEX

NO 1

NON.

NOT-

NOTI Mar.

. Noti% June

NUCL sot.

NUCL Nov.

NUCG John Mich.

OBLIC

NON-MISTENT AVERAGE 0 Nation 182, 102(1957) Sept. 7.:

~;N(&SO-CI;EAN FALLOUT. The 70, -- 68(lg57) NOV. 25.

KQJZS AND COMMEIPT; CONTAMINATION OF EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE. New Yorker 31, 29( UT. 19.

NOTES AND COMMENT; STRONTIUM 90 IN NEW YORK CITY. New Yorker 2, 23(1957) &me 8.

ICL,EAR LONG-RANGE FALLOUT IN SURFACE WATERS. C. G. Bell, Jr. groc. Am. DC- Civil Engrse 81j, (SA 5. No. 1400) l-22(1957) Oct.

ICLEAR WEAPONS TESTS; STATEMENTS BY SCIENTISTS. Science 124, 925-6(1956) IV. g.

CI~N-ANTINUCIEON POTENTIAL FUNCTIONS IN PSEUDOSCALAR MESON THEORY. hn N. Hayes (Univ. of Wisconsin Madison). Univ. Microfilm (Ann Arbor,

hich.), L. C. Card No. Mic g-lgO[, 7'gp.; D. lssertation Abstr. l8, 2184(1958

ON TO TOMORROW. A. Schweitzer. Saturday Review kl, 21-8(1958) May

29

MILK ALL OF, US DRINK AND FALLOUT. Consumer Repts. &+, 102-3(19%) Mar.

MCDIFICATI'CN OF RADIATION-INDUCED INJURY BY POST-TREATMENT WITH OXYGEN. R. S. Caldecott-et'al; Natl. Acad. Sci. of USA Proc,. 4& 975-83(:1957).

I$)~~ SIEVES ADSORB l-131 FROM AIR. M. A. Wahlgreen and W. W. Mel&e. Nucleonics 2, 1% 158, 160095%

MONITORS RING A-BOMETFST. Electronics & 13-14(1958) June 13:

MORE FACTS NEEDED ON FALLOUT. N. Stanford. Foreign Policy Bull. 2, 163(x957) July 15.

THE NATURAL PROTECTION and John F. Spalding.

NEW DANGERS OF H-BOMB;

NEW YORK CIVIL DEFENSE

OF SHEEP FROM EXTERNAL BETA RADIATION. C. C. Lushbaugh Am. J. Vet. Research so 345-61(1957) Apr.

FALLOUT. SC%. New&Letter 2, 147(1955) M:ar. 5.

ENLISTS VOLUNTEER RADIO HAMS FOR FALLOUT I'BPORTS. American City & 195(19%) aY=

mxr DOOR TO GROUND ZERO. R. Friedman. Nation 182~ 256-g(lg57) Oct. lg.

NEXT TO LAST WORDS. New Republic , 4(1957) May 6.

NO MUTATIONS FROM RADIOACTIVE FALLCUT? Sci. Digest 40, X2(19$) :Dec.

1955)

24.

I

I

:

O~E~~IONS OF UNUSUAL RADIOACTIVITY IN PgCIPaATIONS WHICH FELL IN BEBRECENBETWEEN APRIL 22-DECEMBER 31, 1952. Szalay Sdndor and Be:rg&yi D&es. Budapest, Magyar Todomanyos Akademia, 19550 13~. (In Hun(wian)

OBSERVATIONS ON RADIOACTIVE CLOUDS FROM THE ATOMIC BOMB TESTS FOR THE YEARS 1953-1954= A. Sittkus. Translated from Naturwissenschaften 42, 478-82(1955). lip. (AEC-y-2947)

4' OPEN LETTER TO DR. SCHWEITZER. W. I?. Libby. Bull. Atomic Scientists 13, 206-7(1957) June.

OUR NUCLEAR FUTURE, REVIEW. 'E. Teller:and A. L. Latter. Bull. Atomic Scientists l& 235-6(1958) June.

PERIL OF STRONTIUM 90. Time 5, 24(19n) M.zy 6,

PERSISTENCE OF RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION IN ANIMALS OF MARSHALL ISLANDS TWO YEARS AFTER OPERATION CASTKiZ. S. H, Cohn (U.S. Naval Radiological Defense Lab., San Francisco). p.2l_l-18 in "THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS OF A FALLOUTFIELD." Gordon M. Dunniz and John,A. Hilcken, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy Commission - Department of Defense, 1958. 236~. @.75(GPO).

PERSONNEL PROTECTION INSTRUMEMTS FOR USE IN GAMMA IXRADIATION CELLS. E. W. Pulsford and C. C, H. Washtell. Nuclear Power2, No. 10, 58-61(1957) Feb.

l?IAN!F UFTAKE dF STRONTIUM-90, XTTiW&,31, RUBIDIUM-106, CESIUM-137 AND CERIUM-144 FROM SOILS. F+i'~.,p&uney'$t,a$. Soil-Sei. 83(5), 369-76(1957)

PLUTONIUM CONTAMINATION FOUND OFF-SITE FOLLOWIEG ONE-POINT DETONATIONS. M. W. Carter and 0. R. Placak (U.S. Public Health Service, Las Vegas, Nev.). p. 185-7 & "THE SHORTF,R-TERM BI$dXXAL HAZARDS OF A FAILOUT FIEIX)." Gordon M. Dunning and John A. Rileken,.: eds. Washington, Atomic Energy Commission - Department of Defense, 1958. 236~. @.75(GPO)

i.. POLARIZATION MEZZXJRES RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Sci. News Letter ap 168(1955). 1.

POLITICAL FALLOUT. Newsweek 9, 38(1957) June 17.

THE POSSIBLE ATMOSPHERIC TRAJECTORIES OF RADIOACTIVE PRODUCTS FROM THE MARSHALL ISLANDS NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS. D. A. Drogaitsev. Priroda No. 7, 78-80(1958) s i.- (In Russian)

POTENTIAL HAZARD OF WORLD-WIDE Srgo FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR WEAPONS TESTING. Wright H. Langham. Health Physics &, lo5-24(1958j Sept.

31

THE PREPARATION AND BIOLOGICAL APPLICATION CF AIRBORNE S IMULANTS CF FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR DETONATION. S. H. Cohn, W. B. Lane, J. C. Sherwini J. K. Gong, and L. Weisbecker. J. Air Pollution Control Assoc. 'j'9 20-5(1957) May.

PRESENCE-OF STRONTIUM-go-IN SOILS'AND VEGETATION IN THE SURROUNDINGS OF MOSCOW. P. M. Chulkov et-al. Pochvovadenie &, 28-34(1957) April.

PROTECTION AGAINST FALLOUT RADIOACTIVITY. E. E, Massey. Can. Textile J. B, No. 10, s-61(1958).

PUBLIC HEALTH IMPLICATIONS OF SHORT TERM HAZARDS. J. G. Terrill, Jr. (U.S. Public Health Service, Washington). p.219.21 in "THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS OF A FALLOUT FIELD." Gordon M. Dunnsand John A. Hilcken, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy Commission - Department of Qefense, 1958. 236~. @.75(GPO)

THE QUESTION AS TO WHETHER FOODSTUFFS AFFECTED BY IONISING RADIATIONS ARE DANGEROUS TO HEALTH. J. Kuprianoff. Translated by E. Wait from Deut. Lebensm.-Rundschau 2, l- (1956). 13~. (AEC-tr-2681)

_-

RADIATION DANGERS; EXCERPT FROM RADIATIO 1

: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT AFFECTS YOU, WITH EDITORIAL COMMENT. J. Schuber and R. Lapp. New Republic 136, 8-13(1957) May 20. .

RAD@!fION, FALLOUT; A SELECTED LIST0 E. M. Oboler. Library J. 5, 3O69-70(1958) Nov. 1.

RADIATION HAZARDS; ABSTRACTS OFTWO PAPERS. W. Theimer and E. H. Graul. Engineering J. 4l, 87(1958) Mar.

RADIATION AND ITS HAZARDS. C. W. Shilling' Atomics and Nuclear Energy 2, lg8-201(1958) June.

ITS FROM THE SKY; FALLOUT FROM TEST, MARCH 1, 199. Time 3, 66(195g) June 20.

RADIATION HAZARDS FROM FALLOUT AND X RAYS., .Consumer Repts. 22, 484-8(1958) Sept.

RADIATION: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT AFFECTS YOU. Jack Schubert and .Ralph E. Lapp. New York, The Viking Press, 1957. 314~.

RADIOACTIVE AEROSOLS. G. (In Russian)

RADIOACTIVE CARBONINTHE M&nich and Jo C. Vogel.

RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION

L. Natanson. Uspekhi Khim. %p 142$45(1956) Dec.

ATMOSPHERE PRODUCED BY ATOMIC EXPLCSIONS. K. 0. Naturwissenschaften 9, 327~g(lg58). .(In German)

OF EXPLOSIONS. L. Jurkiewicz.

THE ATMOSPHERE BY THE FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR Nucleonika Pp 657-66(1957). (In Polish)

- I::. :_

. .

._.. :- _. ‘.

RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION OF CERTAIN AREAS INTHE PACIFIC OCEAN FROM-NUCLEAR IESTS. Gordon M. Dunning, ed. Washington, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 1957. 60p. $0.40(Gm)

RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION OF FOODS AND ANIMALS. E. P. Laug. No. 3, 2s27(1958)..

MilitarJl Med. 123,

RADIOACTIVE COti~NATION OF FOODSTUFFS FROM FALLOUT AS A SOURCE OF EFZCR IN SOME ANIMAL EXPERIMENTS. C. G. Clayton. Nature 1n9 829-30(1957). .

RADIOACTIVE DUST IN THE AIR. N. Yano and H. Naruse. Papers Meteorol. and $;eophys. (Tokyo) 1, NO. 1, 34-41(1956).: (In Eb@ish)

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. Willard F. Libby. Proci Natl. Acad. Sci. (U,.S.)_ 2, 758-750957) Aug.

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. R. E. Lapp. Bull. Atomic Scientists 11, 45-51, 206-~(1955). IFeb., June; New Republic 132, 8-12*m55) Feb. 14; Sci. Digest 7, 73-Y(ly55) Iday; Time %J 28(1955) Feb.21; New Republic 132, 23(1955) Apr. t . .;.

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT COLLECTED IN TOKYO@N NOVEMBER 26, TC. Kanazawa; Papers Meteorol. and Geophys. (Tokyo1 1'

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FRCM ATOMIC WEAPONS. F. C. Pace. No. 5, l-12(1956) Nov". $0.20

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM BOMB CLOUDS. H. L. Andrews; Science 122, 399(1957) Mar. 1.

1955. Y. Sugiura and 1;

$28-35(1956).

Behind the Headlines 16, -- 2; . ;. ; I

REPLY. I. L. Cphel. _

t, ~.. . ..-i I . ..~

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT IN AUSTRALIA FROM OPERATION "MOSAIC." W. A. S. Butement, , I,. J. Dwyer, C. E. Eddy, L. H. Martin, and E. W. Titterton. Australian J. ;&. 20, No* 5, 125-350957) Dec.

.:.'. :

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT IN GREAT BRITAIN. _Science 122, 234(1955) Aug. 5.

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT IN NORWAY. T. Hvinden. UEreblad lofj, 899-907, _.>‘., .:__>:, - -I’);.I- < L ;e&

921-9( 1958) l ‘_ : QH-.

*$&g$gj _;,2_:;

RADICACTIVE FALLOUT IN THE UNITED STATES. ., .;~-$l& f~~~~~z~

M. Eisenbud and J. H. Hafi]_ey. ’ ---;5--~:Xi~~

Science 121, 677'-80(1955) May 13. ~.: ',;- ~;z:;;+-,f

; ‘: .?I.? ?$l $z*:;..’ .-?. .*;.; ‘_, 2, ;_- I

RADIOACTIVE FALLCUT THROUGH SEPI'EMBER I-955. M, Eisenbud and 5. H. Harley. “-;3.:$I;

ScYence 124, 25~5(1956) Aug. 10. ;.<---;--_i.-, _... .~ .L.?_. ,-+;: :yg%:-.*;i 1 - ._T _ _. ?&.;q ~ RADIO-ACTIVE FALLOUT AND ITS HAZARDS TO MAN. W. R. bf@Mu~ay. S. African Med??~~;< ir. 31, No. 49, l246-52(1957) Dec.. 7. -

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT AND RADIOACTIVE STR@7JXUM. W. F. Libby0 Science 123, 657-60(.1956) Apr. 20.

Rc SC

Rc Mf

RA %

ON Lo

RA Bn

RAI

k RAI

Grc

Fis

RAD: 882.

RAD: Jul;

ON 1 M. S

RADI 602- I

RADI W. F

RADD Scie:

/

S. M.

RAPII mo. i

33

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. W. F. Libby. Remarks before Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences, Lausanne, Switzerland, March 27, 19%.

RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. W. F. Libby. Remarks delivered before the Spring Meeting of the American Physical Society, Washington, D.C. on April 26, 1957.

RADIOACTIVE,FALLOUT; WITH EDITORIAL COMMENT. W. F. Libby. Bull. Atomic Scientists g, 2$-60(1956) Sept.

ON RADIOACTIVE HAILSTONES. I. H. Blifford, Jr., R. L. Patterson, Jr-, L. B. Lockhart, Jr., and R. A. Baus. &ll. Am. MeteoiFol. Sot. 38(3), .139-41(1957).

RADIOACTIVE PARTICIES IN'IHE ATMOSPHERE AT CINCINNATI, OHIO. R. Louis Bradshaw and Lloyd R. Setter. pu'olic Health Repts. (U.S.) & 431-8(1958).

RADIOACTIVE STRONTIUM FALLOUT. Mech. Eng;. 3, log7(1956) Dec.

RADIOACTIVITY FROM RUSSIA. Time 66, 5O(lg$) Dee, 12. -I_

RADIOACTIVITY OF AIR CAUSED BY NUCLEAR BOMB TESTS. Artur Aron and Bernhard Gross. Z. Naturforsch. %a, g44-'j(lg57).

maommm OF MILK (EDITORIAL), Am. Milk Rev. 2, 22(1g57) February. .

RADIOA&VITY OF PEOPLE AND FOODS. E.. C. Anderson, R. L. Schuch, W. R. Fisher, and W. Langhsm. Science 1~25, 1273-8(1957).

RADI'OACTIVITY OF PEOPLE AND MIX 1957. E, d. Anderson. Science 128, 882=6(lgp)- Oct. '1.7:

RADIO-CAESIUM IN DRIED MILK. D. V. Booker. Phys. in Med. Biol. 2, 29-35(1957) July.

ON THE RADIO ELEMENT' S OF FISHES CONTAMINATED BY THE NUCLEAR BOMB TEST.- M. Saiki..' -Japan Analyst 1(7)# 443-9(1957).

RADIOISoTopES ON YOUR ROOFTOP. Luther B. Lockhart; Jr. J. Chem. Educ. 2, 602-(19%).

RADIOLOGICAL DECONTAMINATION OF PA -VEMENTS 'AND ROOFS. E. E. Shalowitz and W. F.'Glover; Public Works 89, lTj8(lg$3) Feb.

RADIOSTRONTIUM FALLOUT FROM CONTINUING NUCLEAR TESTS. Charles I. Csmpbell. Science 124, 8g4(lg56) Nov. 2.

c

RAIN SCAVENGING OF RADIOACTIVE PARTICULATE MATTER'FROM THE AI'MOSPHEREo S. M. Greenfield. J. Meteorol. I& No. 2, 115-25(1g57) Apr.

RAPID METHOD FOR DATING NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS, Sait Akpinar. Nucleonics I__'& No. 7, 88-g(lg57) &ly.

-I

ir.f ;,:j . .:..:

.- ._. . -1 i

:‘- .:.-_

R RATE OF-ENTRY'OF RADIOACTIVE STRONTIUM INTO PLANTS FROM .SOIL. R. S. Russell~:anl _::: G. M. Milbourn. Nature. 180(4581), 322-4(1957) Augi 17*

I ^ ,\y 4; -“’ ;-;.. . ..; . -’

REACTOR EXCLUSION AREAS; CAN THEY BE ELIMINATED? G. W. C. Tait. Nucleonics &, n-30958) Jan.

RELATIVE ATMOSPHERIC DIFFUSION OF SMOKE PUFFS. F. Gifford, Jr. J. Meteorolc:l& 410-4(1957). <’

REPORT ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT TRANSMITTED TO UNITED NATIONS. U. S. Dept. State Bull. 2, 326(W6) Aug. 20.

REPORTER AT LARGE; FALLOUT. D. Lang. New Yorker 2, 31-2(1955) July 16.

REPRESENTATIVE HOLIE'IELD ON RADIATION DANGER; CONDENSATION OF ADRESS, JUNE 28, 1957. C. Holifield. Bull. Atomic Scientists l& 268(x957) Sept. T.

RESEARCH IN THE EFFECTS AND INFLUENCES OF THE NUCLEAR BOMB TEST EXPLOSIONS. t VOILJMFi I AND II. Ueno, Tokyo, Japan Society for the Promotion of Sciences, .-L 19%. 1837p.

RESIDUAL CONTAMINATION OF jpLANTS, ANIMALS, SOIL, AND WATER OF THE MARSHALL ISLANDS TWO YEARS FOLLOWING OPERATION CASTLE FALLOUT. H. V. Weiss (U.S. -_-_$: Naval Radiological Defense Lab., San Francisco). p* 2O5-10.2 "THE SHORTER- ~:?;,, TERM BIOLOGICAL HA!ZARDS OF A FALLOUT FIELD." Gordon M..Dunning and John A., . :-:

Hilcken, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy Commission - Department of Defense, ': 1958. 236~. @.75(GPO) ._. _p; .,‘:.-~ : RETENTION AND EXCRETION OF RADIOSTRONTIUM IN MONKEYS. At H. Ward. Ji Nucleaz$~~~' m 2, 192-202(1957).

.., ,_ : '. .

RETENTION OF SUB-MICRON AEROSOLS IN THE HUMAN RESPIRATORY TRACT. J. N. Stannard and P. E. Motiw (Univ. of Rochester, N.Y.). p. 189-95 2

I- i:, _I;

"THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS OF A FALLOUT FIELD." Gordon M. _

Dunning and-John A. Hilcken, eds. Washington, Atomic Energy Commission T I,

Department of Defense, 1958. 236~. @.75(Gm)

RETENTION AND TOXICITY OF RADIOSTRONTIUM INMONKEYS. A. H. Ward. uNESCO/~S/RIC/~~~, Pergamon Press, Ltd., 1957:'.9p.

ROUND THE WORLD TRACER; TRACING RADIOACTIVE AIR MASSES. The 3, 73(1955) ‘:.,2g$$:’

Mar. 12. . ..i

f&ICC ENERGY COMMISSION; J, Am. Sot. Safety Engrs.

SAFmry

g, No. ANDACCIDlZNTREZORD 2, lg-24(1957) May.

1

:

!I 1 K S J. 0

Is:

CL

SC

Il.

ST Se

11 I S Gm

ST: %!

:., _-.:

35

SAMPLE CALCULAT IONS OF GAMMA-RAY PENETRATION INTO SHELTERS: -CONTRIBUTIONS OF SKY SHINE-AND ROOF CONTAMINATION., M&in Jo Bepgep and James C,, Lamkin. Jo Research Natl. B~P. Standards 60, 109.16(1958) Feb..

S%IENCE TESTIFIES; HEARINGS OF CONGRESSIONAL JOINT COMMITTEE ON ATOMIC ENERGY. New Republfc 136, 3-4(1957j June 10.

SCIENTISTi $0 MEASURE H-BOMB DEBRIS.

SEARCH FOR FALLOUT IN AUSTRALIA FROM D, Wb Keam, D, J. Stevens, and E. Wt, Not 2, 39-41(1957) Aug.-Sept.

Sci. News Letter & 329(1.956) May 26.

THE CIj[RISTMAS ISLAND TESTS, L. Jo Dwyer, Titterton. Australian J. Sci, 20,

SEARCHING INQUIRY INTO.NUCLEAR PERILS. Life .42, 24~g(1957) June 10. --

SECOND REPORT ON RADIOACTIVE PRECIPITATION, F, Alba AdaT. A. Brady, H0 Lezama, A, Tejera, Apr. (In Spauish)

and M, Vasquez Barete. Rev,. mex. ,fis. go 97-104(1957)

SEISMOLOGICAL AND RELATED ASPECTS OF THE 1954 HYDROGEN BOMB EXPLOSIONS. T. N, Burke-Gaffney and K, E, Bullen. Australian J. Physo l0, 130-6(1957).

THE SHORT TERM BIOLOGICAL FATE AND PERSISTENCE OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOWT AS w AT VARIOUS LOCATIONS WITHINFALLOUT PATTERNS0 R0 Go Lindberg and KI H, Larson (Univ. of California at Los Angeles). p* 197-204 in "THE SHORTER-TERM BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS OF A FALLOUT FIELD." Gordon M*%nning and John A, Hilcken, edso Washington, Atomic Energy Comissfon - Department of Defense; 1958. 236~~ @.75(GPO),

SIMPLE FALLOUT METER USES CADMIUM SULFIDE. C. C. Klicko H, J, Peske, P. T. Cole, H. Rabin, and Jo J. Lsmbe. Nucleonics l& No, 12, 48-g(l955).

SOME OF THE PROBLEMS OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT IN RELATION TO AGRICULTURE. L. E, Hughes. J. ASP, Sot. Un5vo Coil. Wales z. 36-41(1957). _

SPREAD OF PARTICULATE CONTAMINATIGN FROM STACKS. W. 13, Hamfso Arch. Ind. Health lzo 274-83(1957).

STATEMENT, JULY lPp 1956. id Strlmss-. “- Sept.

Bull. Atomic Scientists l2, 263(1956) -.

"STATEMENT ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT" BY ADVISORYCOMMITTEE ON BIOLOGY AND MEDICINEr Go Failla. Pablo Scientist 46, 138-~(1g58)e

STILL SOME DOTUBES: CONGRESSIONAL INQUIRY INTO NUCLEAR BOMB TESTING., New Republic a9

STRONTIUMAND STRONIXUMAND &,P 100957).

3-4(1$57) June 17* _ -

CAL@lrJMCOIJTE~S OF CROP PLANTS INRELATIONTO EXCHANGEABLE CALCIUMINTHESOIL, R. G. Menzel and W., R, Heald, Agron. Abso

~~(IN!JJIUWXLCIUM MOVEMENT FROM SOIL TO MAN. .C. L. Comar, R-i H. Wass&r&q, and R. Scott Russell. Science x?& 485-92(1957) Sept.

STRONTIUMINDIET. F. J. Bryant, A. C. Chamberlain, G. S. Spicer, and M. S. W. Webb. Brit. Mea. J. I., 1371.5(1958) June 14.

_'

STROmTIUM LIMljTS IN PEACE AND WAR. R. E. Lapp. Bull., Atomic Scientists 12, 287-g(lg56) act 6; New Public 135, T-6(1956) Oct. 15.

STRONTXJM METABOLISM AND STRONTIUM-CALCIUM DISCRIMINATION IN MAN. C. L. Comar, R. H. Wasserman, S. Ullberg, and G. A. Andre&i. Proo. Sot. Exptl. Biol. Med. z, 386-910957).

THE STRONTIUM 90 CONTENT OF MILK FROM 1955-1957. D. Merten and E. Knapp. Kiel. milchwirtsch. Forschungsber, lO, l-7(1958). (In German)

STRONTNM-90 DEBATE. America 2, 318(1957) June 15.

STRONTIUM-90 HAZARDS. W. O.'Caster.

STRONTIUM-90 MAIN H&?X?D. L. Machta 214(1957).

STRONTIUM-90 IN MAN. Ralph E. Lapp.

STRONTIUM-90 IN MAN. J. L. Kulp,'W. Science 125, 219-25(1957).

Science 125, X91-2(1957).

and R. J. List. Sci. News Letter 2,

Science x, 933-4(1957) May 10.

R. Edkelman, and A. R, Schulert. .,'

STRONTIUM-90 IN MAN. II. W. R. Eckelmann, J. Laurence Kulpo and A. R. Schubert. Science 3, 266-74(1958) February.

STRONTIUM-90 IN NORTH ATLANTIC SURFACE WATER, V. T. Bowen and T. T, Sugihara. Proc. Natl. Acaao Sci. U.S. 5, 576-80(1957).

STRONTIUM-90 AND SKELETAL FORMATION. w. H, Langham snd E. C. Anderson. Science 126, 205-6(1957).

TBE STUDY OF ALPHA-RADIOACTIVITY IN m AIR WITH THE AID OF A QUICK-ACTING IONIZATION CHAMBER. U. Fachin and A. Malfvisini. p.274-8 & "DOZIMEXMUYA IONIZIRUYUSHCHXH IZLUCHEXIY." Moscow, Gostekhteoretizdat, 1956. (Translated f'rom Referat. Zhur. Khim. No. 1, 1957. Abstract No. 1324.)

SUGGEST RADIOCARBON HARMFUL ASFALLdT. Sci. ,News Letter 2, 341(1958) NOV. 29,

SUNSHINE AND DARKNESS; PROJECT SUNSHINE. R. E. Lapp. Bull. Atomic Scientists'~~ 27-9(1959) Jan.

SURVEY OF BRITISH WORK ON RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT. W. G. Marley. Bull, schweiz. l&ad. med. W~SS. 14, 34%66(lg58).

U W

U

SI

UI TE

m H.

UP J, 45

NO Wa-

ON MEI,

1

I ,_:= .

T.:

I

37

'.. ,.

A THEORE~CAL ESTIMATE OF THE COLLECTIQN~-ti&ENcIES OF SMALL DROPLETS. T, Pearey and,G,- W. Hill, Quati*_,&, Ro~i..Mete.orol; Sot. 2(355), 'i'7-92(1!?57).

THEORY OF RADIOACTIVE POISONING By M3XT&Y ATOMXC TESTS. K. Bechert. Atomkerri-Ene@%e zs ,64-8(1958) Feth @I Getian)

*' .

THEPDON'TL&EFALLOUT. Repqr%e,r l& 2dciL958) Nov, 130 _

THYROZD RADIGAC3!ZV~ AFTER $XR%EAR WEAPONS @%STS. C. L, Comar, Betiard F. T?tm, U,S.G. Kuhn* f?I, R. Ho Wasserman, M, M, Bold, and 5. Ca Schooley,

1,6-l8~i957) ,July 5e ,= .- :

TOTAL RADiOA&$$E FALLOUT. gi_* News iette< 6& 267(1956) Apr. 22.

TRACEELEMENTS INHUMAN~&%tJE, 1, A,SEMXQUAI@TA~ SPECTRCGRAPHIC SURVEY; 2. ESTl3&TION OF TBE CONCENTRAT~O-NS OF.STABLE STRONTXUM AND BARIUM IN HUMAN BONE, E. M, Sowden and S, RI Stfteh? &o_ & 97dO3p %34;9(1957). . TRAZN!i3$G.:DEVICEFAKESFALLOUT; TRANsMiTTER SXMULATES GAMMA RADIATION, RECEM3RS ARE CALIBRATED XNROEND.3$NS, w z$. 8(1957) Sept, lb

TRUTH &UT -RADXOAC~~VE FALLOUT. Lr' L, ~Straussr, 35-811955) Feb. 25.

U$3._ News. World Rept,, z.

UNCERTAXNT~S: IN EfVf%lJ&!ING THE EFFECTSOF FALLOUT FROM WEAPONS TESTS. W, F. Neuman. Bull. .Atomic,Scier$$sts I& 3~463958) Jan, >. _- I,_ _- _,

U,N. FINDS FALL&T PERIL LESS THAN EXPECTED. .Business Week2 56-8(1958) Aug. 16.

SEEK U.N. SUPERVISION OFAT@@X TESTS.; .Chr$s~,~an _Centm '& 525 (1955) Mar. 16. . . . .

UNPLEASANT DEBATE. Newsweek 9, 64-6(1956) NO+. 26; WILL STRONTIUM-90 POISON THE WORLD? Sci. Digest 41, 29-33fJ.957) Feb. _‘.::I’: :

. ‘. :’ ,. ~l_Tli.

UPTAKE OF CALCIUM-45 AND STRONTIUM~90 FROM WATER BY FRESH-WATER FB3HES~ H. L. Rosenthal, Science l26# 69$700[1957) Oet, ll,

UPTAKE OF FISSSON PRODUCTS ANDNEXJTRGN&DUCED‘RADIONUCIEIDES BY THE CLAM0 J, K. Gong, W. H. Shipman, and S, Ha Cohn. Proe. See. Exptl., Biol, Med, s 451-4(1957)0

.

URGE UN RADIATION STUDY. Sc.i. News._Letter 6& 180[1955) Mar. 19.

NO TITLE. J. R, Miller a&d R. F. Reitemeier. U.S. Dept, Ag~f., Soil and Water Conservation Research Div, Research Rept. No, 300(1957).

ON THE U.S. HEARINGS ONTHE NATURE OF RADSOACTIVE FALLOUT AND ITS EFFECT ON MEN. W. Herbst, Atomkern-Energfe 3, 148-51(1958) APP, (In German)

.I

38

x- U.s.OFFERSAlD INMEASURINGRADIOA~IVEFALlOUT;IJ3TJ!ERTO SECREIXRY-GENERAL HAM!QmSKJom. H. C..Lodge. Jr. U.S. Dept.' State l3d.i. 2, bl(lg‘j6) July 2.

THE- USE OF LARGE SCALE PWRS IN SMALG SCALE DIF'FUSlCN STUDIES.‘ W. G Tank. Bull. Am. Meteorol. Sot. & 6-I.2(1957).

VARIATIONS g ti CONCENTRATION AND THE RATIO OF RADIUM AND THORIUM SEXBS IN THE AIR,'&CORDING TO BS IN THE NORTHERN ALF'S. Reinhold Reiter. 2. lfattiorsch. l+, 720-31(195;). .

VOYAGE OF THE LUCKY DRAGON; EXCERPT. R. E. Lapp. Harper's Maa. 215, 27-36(19g7) _ Dec.; 216, 48qgi.p) Jan.; 72.g(1958) Deb.

WAY OUT OF A DEADLY DILEZdMA; FINDING WAYS TO CUT FALLOUT. Business Week, 1 34(1956) JOY 28.

WE WERE TRAPPED BY RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT, ed. by R. Cahn. J. C. Clark. Saturday Evening Post 130, 17-lg(1957) July 20.

:

WHAT ABOUT 'RADIOACTIVE FAILOUT? Safety Maintenance x, 13(1957) June.

WHAT ARE THE FACTS? Newsweek 3, 62(19$) Mar. 31.

-x ?K

WHAT THE ATOM CAN DO TO YOU AND FOR YOU. W. F. Libby. U.S. News World Rept. 2, 64-m 73-77(1957) May 17.

WHATTHEBOMBSARESOWING. Business Week% p(195.7) June 8.

WHAT IT'S LIKE TO LIVE IN EARTH'S MOST A-BOMEED AREA. U.S. News Worlil Rept. 42, ?!3-82(1957) June 28.

_'

WHA!l?‘S ALL THIS ABOUT STRONTIUM-901 ~THEISEXHOWBR'SVl33WS ONTBE FALLUUT SCARE. U.S. News World Rep?,. 42, 43-6(1937) June 14.

WHAT'S BACH OF THE FALLOUT SCARE. U.S. News World Rept. 42, 258(1957) June 7; ' REPLY. N. Cousins. Saturday Review 40, 20-l(lgy'j') July r

WHO SHOULD JUDGE THE ATOM? C. Holifield. ‘Satur&ay Review 40, 3407(1957) Aug.5

WILL BOMB DUST ENDANGER YOUR HEAIZ'H'r A. P. Armagnac. Popular Sci. 170, 163-7(1957) Feb.

WORLD-WIDE TRAVEL OF ATOMIC DEBRIS. L. Machta and others. Science 124, 474-?(19$) Sept. 14.

AE@ aeparts

tivis%on of Biology and Medicine0 Fmironmental ~exvices Bsanch, &.Ec0

wuliam .Project