MERCURY IN RIVERS AND THE ATMOSPHERE
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There are three things that humans
and animals alike cannot do without. They are air, food and water. This article
deals with water and specifically, mercury in water and the atmosphere.
Mercury is a natural component
of the Earth’s crust and it is extracted from ores in the Earth’s crust. It is
a metal in liquid form. It is silver in colour and if you drop it on the floor,
it splashes into small drops all moving separatly over a portion of the floor. If
a drop of mercury bumps into another drop of mercury, the two drops become a
single larger drop of mercury.
Mercury is used in laboratories
for making thermometers, barometers, diffusion pumps, and many other
instruments. It is used for mercury switches and
other electrical apparatus. It is used as an electrode in some types of
electrolysis and for making batteries. Obviously it plays an important part in
our lives. It is also used in thermometers because mercury doesn’t stick on
anything and it will expand by any form of heat.
Mercury
is extremely toxic because it can enter the body through inhalation, ingestion
or skin absorption. It’s bad stuff and is simply best avoided.
The
effects of mercury exposure vary depending on the form and level of exposure.
Acute exposure to mercury vapor can produce serious effects on the nervous
system including psychotic reactions, hallucinations, suicidal tendencies and
delirium. Continued exposure can produce violent muscular spasms and even
death. When it enters the body, it is stored in the kidneys, blood, spleen,
brain, liver, bones and fatty tissues. It is dangerous for pregnant or nursing
women. Breast milk can become contaminated and in utero exposure to mercury has
been attributed to an increase in neural tube defects.
The
first emperor of China was said to have taken mercury pills to give him eternal
life. Instead the mercury pills destroyed his system and eventually he died.
Years ago, hat makers used mercury to stiffen and form hats. This exposure lead
to the high mortality rate of hat makers, but not before driving them mad. How
did the men who wore those hats fair?
One
of the worst ways mercury is still used is the dental industry's use of mercury
amalgam fillings. If you have these, my advice is get them removed. If you need
a filling, make sure your dentist does not use this toxic substance.
Mercury
is often a danger in industrial settings and exists in power plants that use
coal. Some medical applications, including vaccine production, involve mercury.
Efforts to control mercury exposure have existed in the form of the 1990 United
States Clean Air Act as well as
activity by the EPA but mercury still remains a toxic and prevalent toxin in
our environment.
If
mercury exposure happens through diet or environmental toxins, then your diet
or environment are due for an adjustment.
Injesting
the herb Cilantro has long been thought to facilitate the removal of toxic metals,
including mercury, from the body. You may also benefit from a rudimentary body
cleansing protocol such as the Oxygen
Colon Cleanse Program to get your body to an appropriate baseline so as to
begin a Toxic
Metal Cleanse to remove the toxic metals from your body.
Thiomersal
(Thimerosal), a compound containing mercury and
is a preservative used in many vaccines and some other pharmaceutical
products such as nasal sprays, eye
drops, antiseptic and diaper rash ointments). It is also commonly used in
tattoo inks. This compound is also commonly used in the manufacture of mascara.
Mercury is commonly used in mercury-vapor lamps and is used in some advertising
signs as an alternative to the more widely used neon sign. Mercury is also used
in many fluorescent lamps. It is also
used in the production of chlorine and caustic soda.
Mercury is no longer used for many different applications
because of worries about its safety. In the past it has been used for gold and
silver mining, light switches, batteries, in barometers and other scientific
equipment, preserving wood and used in many other industries.
Let's
face it, human history is cluttered with screw-ups of catastrophic proportion.
An example of Mankind’s stupidity would show up on a list that would extend for
miles involving the incorrect disposal of unwanted mercury which is obviously one
act of stupidity that really stands out. Here is a n example of outright
stupidity. Here is an example of such stupidity.
The Mad Hatter in Lewis Carroll’s classic, Alice’s
Adventures in Wonderland, was a humorous character with a good excuse for his
misconduct. He suffered from chronic mercury poisoning. But the same
story a little closer to home isn’t so funny. Although no one has yet
described a “mad angler” syndrome in Northern Wisconsin, you can’t ignore the
grumblings of anglers who are becoming angry over the growing list of lakes
which carry warnings from the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) that their
fish are unsafe to eat due to high mercury levels.
, The
DNR’s fish advisory for mercury contamination stands at 321 lakes and river
segments and includes many favorite Wisconsin fishing waters such as Lake
Wissota, Tomohawk Lake, Trout Lake, Lake Monona and segments of the Wisconsin,
Wolf, Black and St. Croix rivers. Most lakes in the state have yet to be
tested, but so far roughly one out of every three has had some fish - most
often walleyes - with unsafe mercury levels.
The
mercury that ends up in our lakes and fish comes from a variety of sources,
both natural and human. While natural levels of mercury have never been a
health threat in our food, man-made levels have. Studies of the sediments
(soil) at the bottom of northern Wisconsin lakes show a quadrupling of mercury
since the late 19th century, when industry came to our state. High
mercury levels in otherwise pristine lakes of the far north reveal the
importance of mercury fallout from the air, similar to acid rain, which
originates with air pollution far upwind.
Biologist
Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring was published in 1962. The book that
was about widespread agricultural pesticide use and how toxic chemicals like
DDT were threatening insects, birds and other wildlife had garnered widespread
acclaim and is heralded as a catalyst for the modern environmental movement.
That same
year, a pulp and paper mill in Dryden, Ontario began dumping untreated mercury
waste into the Wabigoon River which included more than 9,000 kilograms up to
the year of 1970. The mill was upstream from several First Nations communities,
including Grassy Narrows, home to the Asubpeeschoseewagong Netum Anishinabek
people. Mercury contamination has triggered an ecological crisis that has
devastated the local environment and community members’ health to this day.
It is
incredible for any manufacturer to be so indifferent to the health of human
beings to do such an egregious act.
One of the primary goals of WHO and its member
states is that “all people, whatever their stage of development and their
social and economic conditions, have the right to have access to an adequate
supply of safe drinking water. A major WHO function to achieve such goals is
the responsibility to propose regulations, and to make recommendations with
respect to international health matters.
The American city of Royal Oak found lead concentrations
exceeding the “Action Level” after water testing. The city
sampled water from 30 homes served by lead service lines that included lead in
the summer of 2019. Eight of the 30 test sites test exceeded the 15
parts-per-billion concentration "Action Level" established by the
Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act when
tested after the water in the plumbing had stagnated for a minimum of six
hours.
Royal Oak, an American city
found lead concentrations exceeding the
Action Level after water testing. The city sampled water from 30 homes served
by lead service lines in the summer of 2019. Eight of the 30 test sites test
exceeded the 15 parts-per-billion concentration "Action Level"
established by the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act when tested after the water
in the plumbing had stagnated for a minimum of six hours.
The city noteed in a press
release that the Action Level is not a health-based standard and the city's
exceedance is not a violation of the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act.
“Releasing a public
advisory is intended to begin a conversation with all the water customers so
they can make educated choices based on factors present in their homes,” said
Interim City Manager David Gillam in a press release. “The public advisory is
not meant to scare our residents. We do not have a drinking water crisis in
Royal Oak, but we do want to work with any residents who want to improve water
quality in their homes.” Out of 23,741 total service connections, the city
estimates that 6 percent, or approximately 1,400 services, have lead or
lead-containing materials. “ Unquote In my opinion, that was a crisis because small parts of lead can accumulate in a human body.
Until
relatively recently, lead was added to petrol to raise its octane rating. After
decades of cars emitting this into our atmosphere, scientists began to find
high levels of lead in the air of our cities and along major traffic arteries.
Even after lead is no longer added to fuel, the lead remains in our urban
environment and re-enters the atmosphere when disturbed. his means that all of
s inhaled that lead into our bodies.
As
to be expected. human beings have the incredible ability to be stupid enough to
cause harm to all of our bodies.
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