As anyone who’s ever broken a thermometer can attest, mercury is a fascinating substance. It also has an interesting history. Named after the fleet-footed Roman messenger of the gods, mercury has been used for more than 2,000 years. Mercury ore cinnabar has even been found smeared on Neolithic skulls. Its first recorded mention is a reference by Aristotle in the fourth century B.C., a time when the silvery-white, heavy metal was used in religious ceremonies. Spanish miners used mercury to process gold ore for ancient Rome; when their mercury supply ran out, gold production dropped and set in motion the decline of the Roman Empire. Today mercury poses a serious threat, this time environmental. Human beings around the world cause mercury to enter the atmosphere primarily when they burn coal or incinerate waste. Studies from Sweden and Florida suggest that mercury also evaporates from landfills, but only 0.0001 per cent. Groundwater contamination from old dumps is of concern but combustion is the major path via which mercury pollutes the globe. Mercury rarely exists in a free state in nature; it’s recovered from red mercuric sulphide in geologically recent volcanic rocks.
The world inventory of mined mercury is estimated at 600,000 tonnes, stored mostly in states of the former Soviet Union. (Mercury has not been mined in Canada since 1975.) Scientists estimate that man-made mercury releases are two- to four times greater than those of nature. The typical mercury content of lakes has increased up to sevenfold since industrialization. Acid rain dissolves lake-rock and releases mercury to water. (Granite contains about 0.2 p/m mercury.) With a melting point of minus 38.87?C, metallic or elemental mercury (the form used in thermometers) readily vaporizes and can be transported long distances. The vaporization rate of mercury doubles with every 10?C temperature increase and its residence time in the atmosphere is up to three years. Not surprisingly, mercury condenses and accumulates in cold climates such as the Arctic or mountain regions. Though far away from industrial activity, these areas have become repositories of the world’s mercury emissions. Mercuric chloride, a simple salt, is the predominant form in many surface waters. Almost all the mercury found in animal tissues is methyl mercury, a water-soluble toxic organic mercury compound. Persistent and non-biodegradable, mercury biomagnifies up the food chain. In the Arctic as few as six steps stand between ingestion by microscopic organisms and consumption by human beings. Pregnant women can pass mercury from contaminated fish to their unborn children. Toxic effects include central nervous system and kidney damage, mental retardation, blindness and cerebral palsy.
The Term Paper on Time to Water the Tree of Library
Time to Water the Tree of Liberty by Dr. William Pierce Today we'll talk about a subject we've spoken about often in the past, and that is freedom, especially its prospects for the future. Unfortunately those prospects are quite dim at the moment. I'm afraid that most people wouldn't agree with me on that, and I think that's because most people equate freedom with comfort, with having plenty of ...