Yes and the chemical changes that occur while inside the smoker's lungs causes the smoke that's exhaled to contain more toxins than that which is inhaled.


Tom C.




From: "William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Doomsday is coming upon us?
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 23:29:16 -0600


----- Original Message -----
From: "Tim Øsleby" Subject: RE: Doomsday is coming upon us?


I could do a simple study on my own. Concentrate on Norway. There are
studies on the amount of CO2 from our car park. We also have pretty good
statistics on the smoking habits here. The only hard part is find the amount
of CO2 released when smoking. The rest is basic math.

This may sound like a silly waste of time, but silly is my middle name.

It wouldn't be science, but it could tell us something.

According to one of my wife's cigarette packs:
per unit:
Co: 12-30 mg
Formaldehyde: 0.045-0.13 mg
Hydrogen Cyanide (Cyanide fer the love of Pete!!): 0.096-0.27 mg
Benzene: 0.042-0.093 mg.

This is what they say comes out of the cigarette, not the smoker...

William Robb


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