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- Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!ames!pacbell.com!tandem!zorch!fusion
- From: DROEGE@fnald.fnal.gov
- Subject: Reply to Chris Phoenix
- Message-ID: <921230173320.20c05e3b@FNALD.FNAL.GOV>
- Sender: scott@zorch.SF-Bay.ORG (Scott Hazen Mueller)
- Reply-To: DROEGE@fnald.fnal.gov
- Organization: Sci.physics.fusion/Mail Gateway
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 02:24:38 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- Chris Phoenix worries that possibly the Mills experiment failed because
- there was a mercury bubbler in the calorimeter. There was a water bubbler
- there first. But Mills said the back pressure would not be high enough.
- There was also and oil bubbler, then the Mercury. Mills seems to me to be
- a moving target. Whenever a careful measurement does not work, you get to
- do something different. But his first experiment "works" if done as he
- describes. But then you find that a more complete experiment does not work,
- then Mills tells you to try something else ... .
-
- As to Mercury making Freedom non habitable, while I agree that it is likely
- not good for you, the human body can stand a lot, and I bet that the over all
- risk of a Mercury spill is a lot less than the toxicity of a bad "O" ring.
- I assure you that as a child, the breaking of a mercury thermometer was a "fun"
- moment. We would pick up and hord the mercury drops until we got a dime. Not
- very often in my childhood. In those days dimes were made of silver and a
- small drop on the dime if worked long enough would makd the dime very shiny
- and slippery. We likely also licked them, though I was broght up to never put
- money in my mouth as it was "dirty". Please note that this involved of
- working the mercury into the dime with the fingers. If mercury were that toxic
- I would be shaking like the Mad Hatter as I must have "silvered" dozens of
- dimes.
-
- Our logic on toxicity seems to be that if a milligram will kill a person, then
- a milligram spread over a thousand persons will kill one of them. Because
- we can now measure fantasticlly small concentrations of materials known to be
- toxic in high concentrations, we are afraid of everything. In the end, fear
- will kill more of us than a few parts per billion of almost anyting.
-
- My grandmother said "you have to eat a peck of dirt before you die". I think
- our bodies were designed to cope with the toxic equivalent of that peck of
- dirt, and it is only when overwhelmed by a massive dose of toxic material that
- the defense mechanisms fail.
-
- Tom Droege
-
- * For those who don't know, a peck is 1/4 bushel. Now what is a bushel?
- "A unit of dry measure containing four pecks" says my dictionary. But it
- also says 2150.42 cu inches.
-