I wonder if you can find old lace in the Earth's crust, as well?
 
Sorry...  sometimes I just can't help myself.
 
--Barry
 

-----Original Message-----
From: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Bob Kennedy
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2008 5:48 PM
To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Did You Know, Arsenic is present in the earth's
crust



Did you know that is the ingredient in anti freeze that makes it so toxic?
It isn't present in the newer echo friendly formulas but it was added to
help harden the copper tubes in radiators. Don't know what gave anti freeze
the sweet taste that attracted animals tempting them to drink it. But now
you know why they died afterwards.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Ray Boyce 
To: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2008 3:38 PM
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Did You Know, Arsenic is present in the earth's
crust

ARSENIC

Arsenic (As) is a silver-gray metal that gained much of its notoriety 
because of its historical use as a human poison (approximately 70 to 180 
milligrams
of arsenic is fatal to an adult). Arsenic is present in the earth's crust at

an average concentration of 2 to 5 mg/kg, with low levels commonly found in
the air, water, and soil. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, 
arsenic was used as a preservative in animal hides, and as an ingredient in 
pigments,
dyes, glass, pharmaceuticals, and pesticides.

In the first half of the twentieth century, arsenic was used in 
pharmaceuticals intended to treat
syphilis
(e.g., arsphenamine), skin diseases (e.g., Fowler's solution, a 1% potassium

arsenate solution), and parasites (e.g., Pearson's Arsenical Solution). 
Arsenic
is still used as an ingredient in pesticides, wood preservatives, copper and

lead alloys, glass, semiconductor devices, and veterinary medicines.

Although arsenic is found in nature in its elemental form (arsenic metal), 
it occurs most commonly in inorganic or organic compounds. Common inorganic 
arsenic
compounds are trivalent arsenic (e.g., arsenite, H3AsO3) and pentavalent 
arsenic (e.g., arsenate, H2AsO4, HAsO42). Common organic arsenic compounds 
are
monomethyl arsonic acid (MMA), dimethyl arsinic acid (DMA, also known as 
cacodylic acid), and roxarsone.

Adverse health effects are dependent on the chemical form and physical state

of the specific arsenic compound. In general, organic arsenic is less 
acutely
toxic than inorganic arsenic. The health effects of arsenic are widely 
variable, and are primarily due to differences in the oxidation state of the

two
predominant forms: trivalent arsenite and pentavalent arsenate. Several 
organic arsenicals that accumulate in fish and shellfish are essentially 
nontoxic.
Human exposure to arsenic compounds occurs primarily in occupational 
settings and by the ingestion of contaminated drinking water and seafood. 
Arsenic
toxicity due to natural contamination of drinking water has been recently 
noted as a significant public health problem in Bangladesh. Predominant 
adverse
health effects associated with acute arsenic exposure include fever, 
melanosis,
hepatomegaly,
cardiac arrhythmia,
peripheral neuropathy,
nephrotoxicity, diarrhea and vomiting, and, at sufficiently high doses (70 
to 180 milligrams for an adult), death. Chronic exposure to arsenic may lead
to neurotoxicity (evidenced by sensory changes,
paresthesia,
and muscle weakness), cancer (basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma of the 
skin,
lung cancer,
or
bladder cancer),
cardiovascular effects (including "blackfoot disease," so called because the

soles of the feet and toes turn black with
gangrene),
skin disorders
such as
hyperpigmentation,
and birth defects.

Arsine gas is a potent hemolytic agent. The International Agency for Cancer 
Research (IARC) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) classify
arsenic as a carcinogen based upon epidemiological evidence demonstrating a 
causal association between arsenic exposure and specific
cancers,
such as
skin cancer
and lung cancer. Arsenic can accumulate in hair and nails, and measurement 
of arsenic levels in these tissues may be a useful indicator of past 
exposures,
while measurement of urine is considered a good indicator of current arsenic

exposure. Arsenic is primarily excreted from the body in urine (30 to 85%
of absorbed arsenic is excreted via urine). Scientists have puzzled for 
decades over arsenic's mechanism of carcinogenicity due to the discordance 
between
the results of human and animal bioassays. Animals appear to be 
substantially less susceptible to arsenic-induced toxicity than humans. 
Investigations
in animals have suggested that inorganic arsenic can be an essential trace 
element in some animals. In contrast, arsenic has not been determined to be
an essential trace element in humans.
So If you are working with wood treated with this stuff be careful and take 
all precautions 

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