I believe it's ranges 3 and 5 that are the ones to watch the most. But translating a gamma range graph (which is a coarse spectrum) into an isotope is not so straight-forward. Some isotopes listed in the West Lake posting have several energy ranges, with only the primary range shown here. For example, if range 3 and 5 both show a spike, it does not necessarily mean both I-131 and Cs-137 are present, as each of these can show a spike in both ranges. See
http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.ca/2013/11/cpm-of-gamma-in-energy-range-600-800kev.html, where the EPA energy ranges are described along with some isotopes that emit in these ranges.
_________________https://netc.com/chart/view.php?n=1%3A919A925A.5 Toronto, Ontario, Canada SBM-20 indoors