6 On the organization of the work of the seventh session, see UN Doc. A/Conf.62/62 (1978). On the negotiating groups and their nucleus composition, see UN Doc. A/Conf. 62/63 (1978). The documents of this session, of which the Official Records were not yet published when this note was written, are conveniently Reproduced in R. Platzöder, Dokumente Der Dritten Seerechtskonferenz Der Vereinten Nationen Genfer Session 1978 (Munich: Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, July 1978, 3 vols.) [hereinafter cited as Seerechtskonferenz] . This publication includes the informal proposals submitted in the course of the first part of the session. The work of the first part of the session is summarized in an unnumbered UN document entitled Reports of the Committees and Negotiating Groups on negotiations at the Seventh Session contained in a single document both for the purposes of record and for the convenience of delegations (May 19, 1978, Reproduction number [English version] GE.78-85880), Reproduced in 1 Seerechtskonferenz 88. The Report of the chairman of Negotiating Group 5 (doc. NG5/17) and his Suggestion for a Compromise Formula (NG5/16) appear on pp. 100 and 103 of the unnumbered document. Reproduced in 3 Seerechtskonferenz 820, 824. And see the formal Report by the chairman at the 105th plenary meeting of UNCLOS III (May 19, 1978). The nucleus composition of Negotiating Group 5 consisted of the following 36 states: to Represent the African Group— Algeria, Angola, Egypt, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Nigeria, Swaziland, Zambia; to Represent the Asian Group—China, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Iran, Oman, Pakistan, Singapore; to Represent the Latin-American Group—Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Jamaica, Mexico; to Represent the Socialist Group—Bulgaria, Hungary, USSR, Yugoslavia; to Represent the Western Europe and Others Group—Australia, Canada, Denmark, Federal Republic of Germany, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland; and the United States. It was understood that this allocation of seats among the different regional groups did not follow the established pattern, and was to be regarded as exceptional because of the subject matter of the issues involved. However, all the groups were “open-ended” in the sense that any participant not included in the nucleus was free to join any group with the same status as the original members. About 100 delegations participated in the plenary meetings of Negotiating Group 5. Similarly, its smaller working group was not restricted to the nucleus states. Another aspect of the settlement of disputes, namely disputes concerning sea boundary delimitations, was allocated to Negotiating Group 7. Its work is beyond the scope of this note.