Army Air-Sprayed Poor Americans in Texas and St. Louis

Charlie Primero

Active Member
Mick here is a report I saw today on your favorite topic. You probably have Google alerts for this type of thing, but I thought this one might have been missed...

http://www.ksdk.com/news/article/33...ys-secret-Cold-War-experiments-on-St-Louisans

http://gradworks.umi.com/35/15/3515886.html

"A college professor from St. Louis, Missouri has released research claiming that the U.S. Army conducted secret Cold War tests by spraying toxic radioactive chemicals on cities like St. Louis and Corpus Christi.

Documents showed that the Army used airplanes to drop the chemicals in Corpus Christi, but sprayers were mounted on station wagons and buildings in St. Louis. "
 
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Hmm, just a new spin on an old story. She's suggesting something radioactive was added, but provides no actual evidence. From her 838 page thesis:

http://gradworks.umi.com/3515886.pdf
The material (claimed to be zinc cadmium sulfide) that was sprayed by the Stanford labs
in the St. Louis study was referred to internally as "FP2266".25 FP2266 was
manufactured by the New Jersey Zinc Company and the United States Radium
Corporation. The United States Radium Corporation, located in New Jersey, had been in
legal hot water decades prior, for producing luminescent paint that was used by girls and
young female factory workers to paint watch dials in the 1920s. The young women were
instructed to lick the paint-brushes prior to painting the hands onto the watches, in order
to refine the point of the brush. As a result, the radioactive material in the paint sickened
and killed many of the young women (Frame: 1). Radium 226 was mixed with zinc
sulfide to make the radioactive powder that the workers used to paint the watch dials, and
the compound was used in manufacturing until the 1970s (Frame: 1). It is unknown if
“FP2266” was also known as or incorporated Radium 226, the radioactive radium
product produced by United States Radium Corporation.
Content from External Source
So the evidence is that it has 226 in the name.
 
As Mick rightly said, its new spin on an old story.

From what I understand, the author of this thesis wrongly implies the Zinc Cadmium sulphide used in these Biological Warfare field trials was radioactive just because it was manufactured by the US Radium Corp. Unfortunately she seems to be unaware that the ZnCds used in both the US and UK LAC BW field trials was originally manufactured by the New Jersey Zinc Co. (codenamed NJ 22660) and not the US Radium Corporation. After a company reshuffle, the New Jersey Zinc Co. later became known as the US Radium Corporation and the ZnCds codename changed to 2267.

(source - A Review of the Use of Zinc Cadmium Sulphide (FP) in Particulate Diffusion Studies G.F. Collins 1999 DERA Porton Down)

If you want some background to this series of experiments and other US Army Large Area Coverage concept BW field trials I recommend reading Professor Leonard Cole's ground-breaking book - Clouds of Secrecy.
 
The report into the toxicity of ZCdS is available here.

It is pretty long, reasonably well indexed, and with some pages not html formatted. It gives data as to how many tests were performed, where, what areas were covered, calculations as to exposures and sumarises all the known toxicology info for ZcdS known that the time (of the report).
 
Thanks MikeC.


Unfortunately, as you may already be aware, the National Academy of Sciences were not given vital details of many of the tests which is a major concern.


For instance, the NAS report states:


"THE CONCENTRATIONS OF airborne fluorescent particles of ZnCdS in the Army atmospheric-dispersion studies were measured with impingement and filtration methods. Two of those methods are thoroughly described by Leighton and others (1965), but the methods used at specific locations are not described in detail in Army risk-assessment documents."


This is an important admission because, according to Porton Technical Paper No 811 - Loss of Fluorescence by Airborne Tracer Particles (FP), ZnCds particles collected by Impactor (impinger) sampling devices run a great risk of being obscured by local pollution and are not suitable for use in making estimates of particle concentration (and therefore dosage estimates).


The US Army used two types of sampling devices for particle collection in its ZnCds field trials: the Roto-Rod and the Millipore filter. While the filter device was thought by Porton Down to be able to provide particle counts accurate enough to estimate received dosage, the Roto-Rod was not. It is acknowledged to have low efficiency when sampling particles lower than 10 microns, which is unfortunate as the particle size used in the ZnCds field trials was between 0.5-6 microns. While impactor/impinger samplers were considered suitable for use in tracer trajectory studies, they were not thought to be suitable for providing particle counts suitable for concentration or dosage estimation.

The Roto-Rod was not used in Porton Down’s numerous ZnCds field trials.

If the US Army were unable to inform the NAS which sampling device (Filter or Roto-Rod) was used in which trial, then this raises concern about the accuracy of the particle count data provided for the NAS dosage estimates.

Another concern raised by the report was the lack of available toxicity data concerning the inhalation of ZnCds particles of the size used in these field trials.

“"No toxicity experiments of inhaled ZnCds are available in literature. Because the ZnCds particles used in the Army's dispersion test were so small, the particles could probably be inhaled and deposited in the deep lung. The lack of solubility of the particles suggests that they are not likely to be absorbed from the lung into the blood for systemic distribution. No information is available on the potential toxicity of the particles in the lung.

It is not known whether ZnCds can be broken down by pulmonary macrophages into more soluble forms of cadmium."


All in all, the NAS can be said to have done their best, but without access to all relevant data all they could do was to make a guess as to the real dosage received by those exposed in the ZnCds field trials programme.
 
I've seen this sort of misrepresentation before.

The NAS were well aware of the limitations of their data, so they constructed 3 scenarios to establish the limits of possible toxic effects -

In the worst-case scenario, ZnCdS would have the toxic properties of soluble cadmium compounds. However, the physical and chemical properties of ZnCdS are known. It is insoluble in water and lipids and only poorly soluble in strong acids. If it is assumed that in vivo ZnCdS becomes as soluble as any cadmium compound and might release its cadmium ions to react freely with biologic targets, it would be appropriate to estimate the toxicity of ZnCdS from the toxicity of soluble cadmium compounds in general. It is extremely doubtful whether such an assumption is warranted. Our general understanding of metal toxicology gives this worst-case scenario little, if any, plausibility.
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ZCS simply is not biologically available as many cadmium compunds, because it is insoluble in water!

Here's the 2nd scanrio - it is actually a "best case" scenario where ZCS is "known" to be completely harmless - and they reject it:

In a second scenario, ZnCdS might actually be a biologically inert particle, not more toxic than all the other respirable particles present in our daily environment. This scenario is based on physicochemical properties of ZnCdS (only poorly soluble in strong acids), which results in a lack of acute oral or dermal toxicity. However, the lack of a comprehensive evaluation of the toxicity of ZnCdS, particularly long-term low-level effects, and the fact that ZnCdS might be degraded to some extent, albeit only very slowly, preclude endorsement of such an assumption.
Content from External Source


The 3rd scenario postulates that ZCS is as soluble as a substance for which there is well known data, but which is also certainly more dangerous than ZCS:

In the third scenario, ZnCdS would have toxic properties similar to those of cadmium sulfide, CdS, an insoluble cadmium compound. ZnCdS has a crystalline structure similar to that of CdS; the only difference is that in ZnCdS, zinc replaces 80% of the cadmium in the lattice. CdS is insoluble in water and lipids and slightly soluble in strong acids. Experimental data on toxicokinetics and toxicity of CdS are available. They clearly show that the cadmium in CdS is much less bioavailable than the cadmium in soluble compounds. ..... Therefore, the subcommittee chose to base its assessment of the potential toxicity of ZnCdS for noncancer health effects on the toxicity of CdS.
Content from External Source
Constructing these scenarios is a perfectly adequate means for establishing the boundaries of the possible toxicology of the substance used.

At best the implication that the NAS results are somehow inadequate because they could not determine the toxicology of Cadmium is based upon a poor understanding of the information presented.
 
It is acknowledged to have low efficiency when sampling particles lower than 10 microns, which is unfortunate as the particle size used in the ZnCds field trials was between 0.5-6 microns.

If you know the efficiency then you can take it into account. And if you know that fluorescence is lost at some given rate then you can account for that too.

These are basic experimental techniques that any high school student would be able to figure out.

I've seen this nonsense before not so long ago - repeating it doesn't make it right!!
 
You can quote NAS selected scenarios all you want, it doesn't change the fact that the NAS were not working with data suitable for accurately estimating inhaled dosage. Neither were they able to discover any literature concerning toxicity experiments re the inhalation of ZnCds.

I find this to be of major concern - you don't. We'll just have to agree to differ :)


If you know the efficiency then you can take it into account. And if you know that fluorescence is lost at some given rate then you can account for that too.

These are basic experimental techniques that any high school student would be able to figure out.

I've seen this nonsense before not so long ago - repeating it doesn't make it right!!

Forgive me if I'm wrong, but if you've seen this explanation before, were you person who asserted that 'the rotorod is well suited to measure concentrations'?

And who went very quiet when proved wrong?
 
And who went very quiet when proved wrong?
Hiya Icewhale. And who never lets context interfere with a good story? I mean, the Cold War, with intercontinental warheads possibly replete with Anthrax and Sarin? THAT context...
 
Care to elaborate on that JazzRoc?

And why are you using two accounts? I've experienced your unique *ahem* social skills often enough to notice similarities ;)
 
Hiya Icewhale. And who never lets context interfere with a good story? I mean, the Cold War, with intercontinental warheads possibly replete with Anthrax and Sarin? THAT context...

Ah, a judicious edit instead of a reply. Not avoiding my second question are you JazzRoc?

OK don't be coy - remind me of your contextual problems with my post about these field trials. Spit it out Man.
 
Ah, a judicious edit instead of a reply. Not avoiding my second question are you JazzRoc? OK don't be coy - remind me of your contextual problems with my post about these field trials. Spit it out Man.
The contextual problem is yours, not mine. You apparently don't know there was a context in the first place. Is this as tight a circle as you want before I prove you deficient to a post-neolithic chinaman??
 
Gentlemen, please.

This is old stuff. And all it really boils down to was that the Army was perhaps not as cautious as it could have been in its choice of tracer material. It's a tiny little thing when you compare it to actual pollution, or things like leaded petrol. Icewhale, with respect, I suspect you've focused rather a lot on this one subject over the years, and perhaps you've lost a bit of the broader perspective? Why exactly is this such a big deal?
 
My apologies Mick.

But surely it boils down more than just the Army not being as cautious as it could have been in its choice of tracer material? There is also the important issue of the military using populated areas as a giant outdoor laboratory, without informing those who would be exposed to its possible effects.

And while you might think it a tiny thing compared to actual pollution, whatever that is (surely pollution is pollution, regardless of scale), you must agree that this is probably not a view shared by those exposed in these experiments.

I agree though that having spent the past 15 years campaigning for the release of further information concerning the UK's involvement in these experiments, and successfully lobbying for two independent reviews, there is a chance that I may not share your perspective on these matters. However I could equally respond that your perspective is influenced by not understanding the true extent of these experiments. ;)

And you asked 'whats the big deal?' Well there is the fact that the UK Government refuse to rule out conducting larger-scale BW field trials, which involve the use of BW simulants in populated areas, in the future.

That to me is a very 'big deal'. ;)
 
I think a part of the problem with the story, and the reason why it has legs, is that it's often framed as "the army experimented ON an unsuspecting public".

But that's not what happened. The army performed some experiments to see how far things spread in the wind. People would have been exposed to minute quantities of those substances. But the army were not testing those substances on people. They were just seeing how far the wind blew them, and over what area, and in what proportions.

To me that's no different from emissions regulations at factories and power plants. Say you live upstream of a chemical plant - are you not also part of a "giant outdoor laboratory"? Is it not a calculated risk, a gambled with the health of the people upwind? And are the majority of those people not completely oblivious to the details of that risk?

In decades past emissions regulations were less strict. There was less concern for marginal unknown risks, and in generally far less known about long term health problems. I think the actual damage done from that lax regulation of industry was incalculably greater than the ZCS trials. But the ZCS gets the press because it's more sexy, with the secrecy, and the exotic weapons. But really it's just a small bit of banal pollution.
 
Forgive me if I'm wrong, but if you've seen this explanation before, were you person who asserted that 'the rotorod is well suited to measure concentrations'?

And who went very quiet when proved wrong?

I went very quiet because I couldn't be bothered with disinfo any more.

Since you bring it up again I have decided a a short, sharp and to the point reply showing why you are still wrong with your condescending dismissal of the NAS report as "well they tried their best" is waranted.
 
I think a part of the problem with the story, and the reason why it has legs, is that it's often framed as "the army experimented ON an unsuspecting public".
By someone not a million miles away.

But the army were not testing those substances on people. They were just seeing how far the wind blew them, and over what area, and in what proportions.
Because IT WAS THE COLD WAR, and some Soviet ICBMs were already filled with Sarin and Anthrax.

To me that's no different from emissions regulations at factories and power plants. Say you live upstream of a chemical plant - are you not also part of a "giant outdoor laboratory"? Is it not a calculated risk, a gambled with the health of the people upwind? And are the majority of those people not completely oblivious to the details of that risk?
No. In a time of war it's actually different when your enemy demonstrates a weapon against which you are unprepared. Your inactivity encourages him to try and use it. And the COLD WAR of the time was continually threatened aggression, with bombers flying constantly towards their targets before being recalled. Remember the Cuban MISSILE CRISIS?

The military and civil defense systems were tasked with with a correct threat assessment and response, in double-quick time, before the enemy used it. Delay may have enticed him. They were hardly likely to wait until Icewhale gave them the all-clear to use ZCS. Fortunately.

the ZCS gets the press because it's more sexy, with the secrecy, and the exotic weapons
You don't have to tell Icewhale this. It's what he has relied on all this time. He knows... it's all he knows...

Meanwhile all those warheads are GONE. They are gone in part because we showed a readiness to defend ourselves by quickly devising a strategy against them.

And Icewhale is selling matches on the streets - the correct job for someone willing to lie by context transferral.
 
One might also note that during the cold war our militaries turned several atolls and bits of Nevada and Australia into nuclear wastelands, displacing the locals, and increased the worldwide atmospheric loading of radioactive stuff by a bit (forgive my inexactitude) - and most people would recognize there was an argument for doing this in the context of the Russian nuclear threat, even though in a modern context such things would (hopefully) be looked on with horror.
 
...really it's just a small bit of banal pollution.

This is what I've always said about drunk driving. If we consider the large amount of enjoyment, convenience, and economic activity alcohol consumers enjoy from driving drunk, the number of accidents and deaths resulting from it are really a bit of banal nothing.
 
This is what I've always said about drunk driving. If we consider the large amount of enjoyment, convenience, and economic activity alcohol consumers enjoy from driving drunk, the number of accidents and deaths resulting from it are really a bit of banal nothing.

Well, except for drunk driving killing thousands of people randomly every year.

I think a closer thing would be smoking on your balcony. Minute exposure of your neighbors to toxic chemicals, but probably perfectly safe in the grand scheme of things. Still illegal in Santa Monica though.
 
The British assessment of the health risk from cadmium exposure due to their experiments was about the equivalent to living in an urban envoronment for up to 100 days, or smoking 100 cigarettes.

Results: About 4600 kg ZnCdS were dispersed from aircraft and ships, at times when the prevailing
winds would allow large areas of the country to be covered. Cadmium released from 44 long range
trials for which data are available, and extrapolated to a total of 76 trials to allow for trials with incomplete
information, is about 1.2% of the estimated total release of Cd into the atmosphere over the same
period. “Worst case” estimates are 10 μg Cd inhaled over 8 years, equivalent to Cd inhaled in an
urban environment in 12–100 days, or from smoking 100 cigarettes. A further 250 kg ZnCdS was dispersed
from the land based sites, but significant soil contamination occurred only in limited areas,
which were and have remained uninhabited. Of the four personnel involved in the dispersion procedures
(who were probably exposed to much higher concentrations of Cd than people on the ground),
none are suspected of having related illnesses.
Content from External Source
and
Key messages
• The maximum possible inhaled dose as a result of the Ministry
of Defence trials is small relative to background
concentrations of inhaled cadmium.
• The increase in cadmium loading of soil near the points of
dissemination from static land based sources is small,
except in the immediate vicinity of the disseminators.
• There were no adverse effects on people operating the disseminators,
who may be expected to have inhaled larger
doses than the exposed population.
Content from External Source
 
Well, except for drunk driving killing thousands of people randomly every year.
Well plug my gusset. That could irritate the constitution. You mean THOSE deaths.... LOL

I think a closer thing would be smoking on your balcony. Minute exposure of your neighbors to toxic chemicals, but probably perfectly safe in the grand scheme of things. Still illegal in Santa Monica though.
That's going too far. (Coughs, reaches for aspirins, disintegrates...)
 
Jim Lee has a vid on this subject, in his typical fear porn style.
I never knew zinc cadmium sulfide was radioactive, mainly because it isn't radioactive. There's the con.

Coupled with that massive corruption of forensic data, and a whole load of plausible deniability, this guy should go far - towards bad style.
 
I never knew zinc cadmium sulfide was radioactive, mainly because it isn't radioactive. There's the con.

Coupled with that massive corruption of forensic data, and a whole load of plausible deniability, this guy should go far - towards bad style.

The claim is that Radium 226 was added. this is based on some pretty circumstantial evidence. This thread explains it.
 
The claim is that Radium 226 was added. this is based on some pretty circumstantial evidence. This thread explains it.
(Wakes up). Oh, yes, 226. Bad luck, letting those numbers be used somewhere else. A dead giveaway, that. (Bites lip, nods off).

ZCS was chosen for its lack of solubility, like barium sulfate used for x-rays. This suggests that care was taken to avoid harm. Why would anyone bother to render harmful something they had already attempted to make harmless?

ZCS fluoresces in UV light, which means that its presence, even in tiny amounts, may be constantly and precisely monitored. It is already a good tool for measuring wind-borne dispersion (which is its task), and needs no tweaking.
 
nobody claimed the cadmium sulfide was radioactive - in fact, it is specifically stated NOT to be so.
 
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nobody claimed the cadmium sulfide was radioactive - in fact, it is specifically stated NOT to be so.

Really? Then why did you say...

IN KEEPING WITH THE STRICT REQUIREMENTS OF PROOF (sometimes upheld at this board, more often than not overlooked or waived for favored member, of whom I am not in that number), anyone who cares to do so may now download full documentation - in the form of an entire dissertation, complete with declassified military documents directly regarding the actions described therein - for airborne experiments in the city of St. Louis, regarding radioactive and other materials
[..]
U.S. Radium... 'private' company which supplied the radioactive compounds which the US military used in civilian radiological aerial (free wind) tests in the city of St. Louis.

So which "radioactive compounds/materials" are you talking about there deejay?
 
They had the airborne experiments in more places than Texas and St. Louis.
The housing addition I lived in was built in the 50's and was used as one of 2 locations in town.
I remember back in the mid-90's when the local news reported it and after that I've been able to connect the dots.
There's no proof the military caused the biggest per-capita cancer related deaths from it and it's not in the water.
But of course no one's going to admit it either that by some remote coincidence the same exact addition they targeted with toxic chemicals was in fact 50 plus years later the highest per capita cancer death rate place in the state.
The maximum estimated cadmium dose from all tests combined was 24.4 micrograms in St. Louis; 14.5 in Winnipeg; 6.8 in Minneapolis; 1.1 in Fort Wayne, and 0.1 in Corpus Christi. In Biltmore Beach, Fla. -- a remote unpopulated island location at the time of the tests -- the total may have been as high as 390 micrograms, but very few people if any were believed to have been exposed there.
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http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=5739
 
neverknwo, Your own source debunks your comments.


News from the National Academies
Date: May 14, 1997
Contacts: Dan Quinn, Media Relations Associate
Amy Kushner, Media Relations Assistant
(202) 334-2138; Internet <news@nas.edu>


EMBARGOED: NOT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE BEFORE 5 P.M. EDT WEDNESDAY, MAY 14


Cold War Chemical Tests Over American Cities
Were Far Below Dangerous Levels


WASHINGTON -- A series of secret tests conducted by the U.S. Army in the 1950s and 1960s did not expose residents of the United States and Canada to chemical levels considered harmful, according to a new report* from a committee of the National Research Council.
...
"After an exhaustive, independent review requested by Congress we have found no evidence that exposure to zinc cadmium sulfide at these levels could cause people to become sick," said committee chair Rogene Henderson, senior scientist, Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute, Albuquerque, N.M. "Even when we assume the worst about how this chemical might behave in the lungs, we conclude that people would be at a higher risk simply from living in a typical urban, industrialized area for several days or, in some cases, for months."

...
For non-cancer toxicity, the committee based its conclusions on what is known about cadmium sulfide, a compound that has some properties similar to zinc cadmium sulfide. The committee estimated that an average-size male could inhale as much as 500 micrograms of cadmium sulfide over a few days without causing toxicity in the lungs. Even in populated areas where exposures from the Army's tests were the highest, residents were exposed to far more cadmium in their normal daily contact with soil, water, food, and air (between 12 and 84 micrograms) than they were potentially exposed to from the Army's tests. The maximum estimated cadmium dose from all tests combined was 24.4 micrograms in St. Louis; 14.5 in Winnipeg; 6.8 in Minneapolis; 1.1 in Fort Wayne, and 0.1 in Corpus Christi. In Biltmore Beach, Fla. -- a remote unpopulated island location at the time of the tests -- the total may have been as high as 390 micrograms, but very few people if any were believed to have been exposed there.
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Is there any epidemiological evidence of harm? Anything of statistical significance?

There was a toxicologic assessment (written in a 386 page report) of those dispersion tests that concluded exposure levels were way too low to have caused anyone to develop adverse health effects.

The subcommittee concluded that the amounts of cadmium from the zinc cadmium sulfide used in the Army's dispersion tests were well below the amounts at which toxic effects occur. For most of the people living in the most heavily exposed populated area—St. Louis—the highest estimated airborne exposure to cadmium (24.4 μg) was equivalent to what urban residents would typically experience from inhaling air over the course of 1—8 months. For people living in Fort Wayne, the highest estimated exposure to cadmium (1.1 μg) was equivalent to what urban residents would typically experience from inhaling air over the course of 1–11 days. For people living in Minneapolis, the highest estimated exposure to cadmium (6.8 μg) was equivalent to what urban residents would typically experience from inhaling air over the course of 1–10 weeks. As a result, the subcommittee has concluded that given the very small amounts of zinc cadmium sulfide to which people were exposed and the short duration of exposure, it is extremely unlikely that anyone in the test areas developed adverse health effects, such as lung cancer or infertility problems, from the Army's releases of zinc cadmium sulfide.
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http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=5761&page=1

http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=5739&page=R1

According to the report, since the first of the year most of us have inhaled as much cadmium as the most heavily exposed area, St. Louis.
 
What is that map supposed to demonstrate? It seems entirely unrelated to the topic.
Sorry.
I'll take it off, since it has no bearing on the topic, but I was looking for some sort of stat to answer your question to Anything of statistical significance.
Which I took time trying to search for anything connected to cancer mortality rates I found anything from Radon to Asbestos as the cause.
I don't have a clue what the map demonstrates, because I don't know how they can accurately map radon cancer deaths from asbestos cancer deaths.
But supposedly this is some sort of map for the housing addition I lived in showing those who died from cancer caused by asbestos and these asbestoes removal companys need some sort of visual to show why you need their services.
I didn't know their was some kind of way yet to even prove how they even get cancer yet but as I just learned after trying to answer your question, it's pointless.
I guess having lived here and watched relatives, girl friends, and just buried a buddy of mine last thurs. It's really hard trying to explain it when it seems like everybody ends up with cancer who lived in that addition. I can't produce the stats showing what they showed on the tv news about that addition being one of the highest cancers rate per captia in the state but I do remember seeing a stat for it.
 
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So what is the point of spraying 'virtually nothing anymore than general pollution' or at least 'nothing toxic' to test the results?

I think Jazzy should have volunteered as the guinea pig to aid the war effort.
 
So what is the point of spraying 'virtually nothing anymore than general pollution' or at least 'nothing toxic' to test the results?

I think Jazzy should have volunteered as the guinea pig to aid the war effort.

They were testing dispersion of airborne particles, not toxicity. Zinc Cadmium Sulfide is visible under an ultraviolet light and that quality makes it easily identifiable in particle dispersion tests.

Sorry.
I'll take it off, since it has no bearing on the topic, but I was looking for some sort of stat to answer your question to Anything of statistical significance.
Which I took time trying to search for anything connected to cancer mortality rates I found anything from Radon to Asbestos as the cause.
I don't have a clue what the map demonstrates, because I don't know how they can accurately map radon cancer deaths from asbestos cancer deaths.
But supposedly this is some sort of map for the housing addition I lived in showing those who died from cancer caused by asbestos and these asbestoes removal companys need some sort of visual to show why you need their services.
I didn't know their was some kind of way yet to even prove how they even get cancer yet but as I just learned after trying to answer your question, it's pointless.
I guess having lived here and watched relatives, girl friends, and just buried a buddy of mine last thurs. It's really hard trying to explain it when it seems like everybody ends up with cancer who lived in that addition. I can't produce the stats showing what they showed on the tv news about that addition being one of the highest cancers rate per captia in the state but I do remember seeing a stat for it.

Asbestos causes Mesothelioma, which is one way of identifying asbestos related mortality.
 
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