We really need to ban dihydrogen monoxide as that is the worst thing ever yet we still have hundreds of deaths linked to it each year sadly.And why do we make this shit again?
We really need to ban dihydrogen monoxide as that is the worst thing ever yet we still have hundreds of deaths linked to it each year sadly.
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This reminded me of watching a video of a guy flushing mercury in a toilet to see how it would work. There must be a difference between the two because this guy really doesn't have much protection:
(edit: after watching the video, the guy states mercury nitrate can absorb through the skin, so he wears gloves for that portion of the video).
Seems like I remember recently reading that in the olden days they used to use Mercury as a laxative. This is how they were able to find all of the camp sites of Lewis and Clark. I guess Lewis on the expedition was always getting constipated, and Clark would say, "Hey dude, take some of this Mercury shit, it will clean you right out".And why do we make this shit again?
We really need to ban dihydrogen monoxide as that is the worst thing ever yet we still have hundreds of deaths linked to it each year sadly.
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Florida country radio morning-show hosts Val St. John and Scott Fish are currently serving indefinite suspensions and possibly worse over a successful April Fools' Day prank. They told their listeners that "dihydrogen monoxide" was coming out of their taps. Dihydrogen monoxide is water.
One of the joys of going to grandma's house was getting to play with the mercury games.When I was a kid, I had a Quicksilver game, and like any red-blooded American boy, I took it apart. The mercury dropped out and splashed all over the carpet. I never told anyone about it.
Now, 40 years later, I look back on that and wonder if mercury poisoning is the reason I'm so goofy![]()
damn even with gloves on she still got messed up.
It definitely depends on the gloves. In that example, assuming it was the same as what the chemist is wearing, she could have been wearing nitrile gloves which, I believe, offer very little protection for certain methylated or heavy metal compounds or what not. I'm not sure if latex (or a certain grade of latex) offers proper protection in that case or not. All of those materials represent a specific lattice of molecules arranged in a certain way and, chemistry being chemistry, can very easily be compromised when the proper molecule comes into direct contact with it. It's why you don't want to let chlorine (bleach) or EtOH come into contact with polystyrene (many of the "hard" plastics, like lucite), wheres these are perfectly fine being stored in polypropylene, a "softer" material. ...well, I'm not a chemist so I probably futzed that explanation up a bit with the plastics, but doing this wrong can certainly lead to serious consequences.
Wtf why would anyone do that
For science!
I think the shiny mercury is one of the safer forms of it, though still dangerous if you get it inside your body, but less so on surface. Still would not mess with it myself though.
Most don't, but in some areas it does, it's dependent on the consistent levels in the wastewater, there are set standards.that is a very large quantity of mercury to dump into the water. Waster water treatment doesn't include mercury recovery does it?
BTW - They have also been caught shooting vultures (protected species) and burying 55 gal. drums of toxic waste, you'd be surprised how much is covered up for the sake of tourism at the "mouse house".
When I was a kid, I had a Quicksilver game, and like any red-blooded American boy, I took it apart. The mercury dropped out and splashed all over the carpet. I never told anyone about it.
Now, 40 years later, I look back on that and wonder if mercury poisoning is the reason I'm so goofy![]()
