“…11 On the other hand, on August 9, 1945, a plutonium A-bomb exploded 500 m above Urakami in Nagasaki city at 11:02 LT. Half an hour after the detonation, large quantities of fission products and unfissioned plutonium in the form of fallout reached the ground (the so-called black rain). The greatest Pu and 137 Cs depositions were found at Nishiyama in an eastern suburb of Nagasaki city, 2.8 km east of the hypocenter, [12][13][14][15][16][17][18] strongly suggesting that the local fallout was not deposited as dust or aerosol particles, but as precipitate. 16 The Tokyo metropolitan area belongs to the Kanto loam region, which mainly consists of clays derived from weathered volcanic ash.…”