We derive constraints on the cosmic rays responsible for the Be and part of
the B observed in stars formed in the early Galaxy: the cosmic rays cannot be
accelerated from the ISM; their energy spectrum must be relatively hard (the
bulk of the nuclear reactions should occur at >30 MeV/nucl); and only
1049 erg/SNII in high metallicity, accelerated particle kinetic energy
could suffice to produce the Be and B. The reverse SNII shock could accelerate
the particles.Comment: 5 pages LATEX using paspconf.sty file with one embedded eps figure
using psfig. In press, Proc. Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph Symposium,
PASP, 199