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Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 1959. Considerations on the Disposal of Radioactive Wastes From Nuclear-Powered Ships Into the Marine Environment. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18744.
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Page 51
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 1959. Considerations on the Disposal of Radioactive Wastes From Nuclear-Powered Ships Into the Marine Environment. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18744.
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Page 52
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 1959. Considerations on the Disposal of Radioactive Wastes From Nuclear-Powered Ships Into the Marine Environment. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18744.
×
Page 53
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 1959. Considerations on the Disposal of Radioactive Wastes From Nuclear-Powered Ships Into the Marine Environment. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18744.
×
Page 54
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 1959. Considerations on the Disposal of Radioactive Wastes From Nuclear-Powered Ships Into the Marine Environment. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18744.
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Page 55

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REFERENCES Alco Products. Inc. (1955) Description of the Army package power reactor. AECD-3731, October, 1955. Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago (1957) The experimental boiling water reactor. ANL-5607, May, 1957. Carritt, Dayton E., et al. (1958) The feasibility of the disposal of low level radioactive wastes into inshore waters of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States. Mimeographed report to the National Academy of Sciences - Na- tional Research Council Committee on Oceanography, 36 pp., plus 10 appendices separately paged. (1959) Radioactive Waste Disposal into Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Waters. National Academy of Sciences - National Research Council, Pub. 655, 36 pp. Congress of the United States (1959) Code of Federal Regulations, Title 10, Chapter 1, Part 20, revised 1959 (proposed). Craig, Harmon (1957) Disposal of radioactive wastes in the ocean: the fission product spectrum in the sea as a function of time and mixing characteristics, in Revelle, et al. (1957), p. 34-42. Department of the Navy (1959) Radioactive waste disposal from U. S. naval nuclear-powered ships. Nuclear Propulsion Division, Bureau of Ships; Iltis, T. J., and Miles, M. E. Mimeographed, presented for the record at the public hearings on indus- trial radioactive waste disposal, held by the Special Subcommittee on Radia- tion, of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, Congress of the United States, 27 January to 3 February, 1959. Dunster, H. J. (1956) The discharge of radioactive wastes into the Irish Sea, Pt. 2, the prelimi- nary estimate of the safe daily discharge of radioactive effluent. Proc. Int. Conf. on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, Geneva, 1955, Vol. 9, p. 712- 715. General Electric Corporation (1957) The General Electric developmental boiling water reactor. SG-SVAL-1, Vallecitos Atomic Laboratory, L. Kornblith, Jr., L. Welsh, and E. Strain. February, 1957. Greendale, A. E., and Ballou, N. E. (1954) Physical state of fission product elements following their vaporization in distilled water and seawater. USNRDL Doc. 436, p. 1-28. International Commission on Radiological Protection (1950) Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protec- tion and of the International Commission on Radiological Units. U. S. Dept. of Commerce, Nat. Bur. Standards Handbook 47. 51

Joseph, J., and Sender, H. (1958) Horizontal diffusion in the sea. Deut. Hydrog. Zeit. 11 (2), p. 49 - 77. Ketchum, Bostwick H. (1957) The effects of the ecological system on the transport of elements in the sea, in Revelle, et al. (1957), p. 52-59. and Chipman, Walter A. (1958) Permissible sea water concentration - monitoring of disposal areas. Appendix VI of Carritt, et al. (1958), 9 pp. Krumholz, Louis A., Goldberg, Edward D., and Boroughs, Howard A. (1957) Ecological factors involved in the uptake, accumulation, and loss of radio- nuclides by aquatic organisms, in Revelle, et al. (1957), p. 69-79. Maritime Administration (1959) Waste disposal considerations in the nuclear-powered merchant ship pro- gram. Mimeographed, presented for the record at the public hearings on industrial radioactive waste disposal, held by the Special Subcommittee on Radiation, of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, Congress of the United States, 27 January to 3 February, 1959. Martin, DeCourcey, Jr. (1957) The uptake of radioactive wastes by benthic organisms. 9th Pacific Science Congress, November, 1957. National Committee on Radiation Protection, Subcommittee on Permissible Internal Doses (1953) Maximum permissible amounts of radioisotopes in the human body and maximum permissible concentrations in air and water. U. S. Dept. of Commerce, Nat. Bur. Standards Handbook 52, 45 pp. Oak Ridge National Laboratory (1959) Maritime Reactor Project, Annual Progress Report for Period Ending November 30, 1958. ORNL-2657. TID-4500 (14th edition). Report of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radia- tion (1958) U. N. Gen. Assembly, Official Records, 13th session, suppl. 17 (A 13838), 228 pp. Revelle, Roger, and Shaefer, Milner B. (1957) General considerations concerning the ocean as a receptacle for artifici- ally radioactive materials, in Revelle, et al. (1957), p. 1'25. Revelle, Roger, et al. (1957) The effects of atomic radiation on oceanography and fisheries, report of the Committee on Effects of Atomic Radiation on Oceanography and Fisheries, of the National Academy of Sciences Study of the Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation. Nat. Acad. Sci. - Nat. Res. Council Pub. 551, 137 pp. Technical Information Service, U. S. Atomic Energy Commission (1958) The pressurized water reactor forum, December 2, 1955, held at Mellon Institute, Pittsburgh. TID'8010, February, 1956. 52

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES- NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL The National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council is a private, nonprofit organization of scientists, dedicated to the furtherance of science and to its use for the general welfare. The Academy itself was established in 1863 under a Con- gressional charter signed by President Lincoln. Empowered to provide for all activities appropriate to academies of science, it was also required by its charter to act as an adviser to the Federal Government in scientific matters. This provision accounts for the close ties that have always existed between the Academy and the Government, although the Academy is not a governmental agency. The National Research Council was established by the Academy in 1916, at the request of President Wilson, to enable scientists generally to associate their efforts with those of the limited membership of the Academy in service to the nation, to society, and to science at home and abroad. Members of the National Research Council receive their appointments from the President of the Academy. They include representatives nominated by the major scientific and technical societies, representatives of the Federal Gov- ernment, and a number of members'at'large. In addition, several thousand scientists and engineers take part in the activities of the Research Council through membership on its various boards and committees. Receiving funds from both public and private sources, by contributions, grant, or contract, the Academy and its Re- search Council thus work to stimulate research and its applications, to survey the broad possibilities of science, to promote effective utilization of the scientific and technical resources of the country, to serve the Government, and to further the general interests of science.

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