Posts Tagged: ‘lead’
If you’re growing a garden at home, you’re probably doing it to save a little money, get some exercise and reap the healthy fruits (and vegetables) of your labor. Chances are you’re not looking for a dose of lead poisoning.
Unfortunately for the growing ranks of home gardeners (7 million more households planted plots this year over last year, according to the National Gardening Association), most urban and suburban soil is contaminated with lead. The dangerous residue is a legacy of lead-based paint, pesticides and leaded gasoline. According to the New York Times, if your garden’s soil is near a busy roadway, an old orchard or a structure (standing or demolished) that was built before 1978 — lead-based paint’s last year on the market — it’s likely tainted with lead.
Bullets are measured by calibers, which indicate their diameter in inches. Find out more about bullets and measurement in this podcast from HowStuffWorks.com.
Like many of my fellow obsessive-compulsive types, I routinely rifle through drawers and closets for unwelcome hangers-on. Once the offending garments have been found, it’s off to the Salvation Army — where it’s hard not to do a little browsing. However, the selection at your local thrift store just got a whole lot slimmer, thanks to a new U.S. lead law that went into effect in February.
Called the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, the federal law aims to limit the amount of lead and other harmful chemicals, like phthalates, in products geared at children under 12. But the law has been generated an angry uproar and landed lead in the headlines yet again.
You don’t need me to tell you that the U.S. economy is in the toilet. The Dow just dipped below 7,000 today for the first time in more than 10 years, and the global economy isn’t far behind.
Most cities won’t accept trashed monitors, because a monitor can contain up to 5 pounds of lead. Learn more about lead in this HowStuffWorks podcast.
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