Posted on 09/10/2002 9:56:27 AM PDT by Korth
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate voted to ban the sale of mercury fever thermometers in order to curb a source of environmental contamination.
On a voice vote and without dissent, the Senate sent The Mercury Reduction and Disposal Act to the U.S. House of Representatives for concurrence.
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates medical mercury thermometers contribute about 17 tons of mercury to solid waste per year, said Sen. Susan Collins, a Maine Republican and chief sponsor of the measure.
The bill calls for a nationwide ban on the sale of such thermometers as well as a grant program to help consumers exchange them for digital ones or other alternatives.
"Mercury fever thermometers are very easily broken. When this happens, the improper disposal of the mercury can have severe environmental and physical consequences," Collins said.
"One mercury thermometer contains about one gram of mercury," said Collins, "enough mercury to contaminate all the fish in a 20-acre (8 hectare) lake."
Her bill would also create an interagency task force, headed by the EPA, to address the problem of the global circulation of mercury and ways to reduce the mercury threat.
BS! Mecury is not water soluble.
Mercury has a low vapor pressure. Ask Torricelli (the one who invented the mercury barometer).
If you heat the metal (boil it) the fumes are deadly.
The liquid metal is about as dangerous as laundry soap at room temperature. I wouldn't recommend drinking it...
--Boris
--Boris
I got ya beat. I've bought only one mercury thermometer about 18 years ago and plan on keeping it for 18 more.
I think every kid or adult has played with mercury at least once, Yes cool stuff.
No, it's because Ron Paul is only a Rep...
I work with it everyday.
Lurking
If what you say is true and I have no facts to the contrary then what we have here is another con-job being perpetrated upon the American citizen by the lying, meddling congress who in fact have very little credibility left to squander!
True. But the symptoms of overexposure are similar for both substances, which is why I linked to that as well, as it gave a good description of the symptoms of mercury poisoning. On the other hand, I specifically chose that particular account of that event because it left out the ultimate conclusion - she later died, but I didn't want to alarm anyone ;)
Either the front half or the back half, I suppose...it depends on whether it was a rectal or oral thermometer...
But how do you explain Congress?
Maybe it's the lead in their butts, Jim.
Old technique here:
-Halve a potato and create a cavity within, large enough to contain the mercury contaminated jewelry item.
-Place the item into the hollow and bind the halves together with cotton string.
-Place potato into a pan of water and bring to a boil then simmer for 15-20 min.
-Let the water and potato cool, remove the item, wash and brush with a little detergent and ammonia (depending on set stones), a pass through the rouge cloth and viola! The mercury has gone and the ring is gleaming.
This works on intricate items like neck chains and if conducted outdoors, presents little to no danger as the mercury stays in the water on the bottom of the pan.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.