Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN See book keywords and concepts | Researchers at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia analyzed a variety of horrid smells ranging from burning hair and rotting flesh to human waste. The two rankest by far were rotting garbage and human waste full of sulfur-containing gases — the very stuff generated in the human gut from soy oligosaccharides.
The Defense Department plans to recreate the two foul smells chemically, but a more natural solution to the human waste smell would be to create it by feeding recruits surplus soy. As yet, stink bomb weaponry has not gone into development. | David R. Montgomery See book keywords and concepts | Hilgard admired the Asian practice of returning human waste to the fields to maintain soil fertility by recycling nutrients. He considered America's sewers conduits draining soil fertility to the ocean. Refusing to contribute to this problem, he personally fertilized his own backyard garden.
In an address to the Mississippi Agticultutal and Mechanical Fair Association in November 1872, Hilgard spoke of how soil exhaustion shaped the fate of empites. "In an agricultural commonwealth, the fundamental requirement of continued prosperity is. . . that the fertility of the soil must be maintained. . | Brenda Watson and Leonard Smith See book keywords and concepts | In addition to people dumping excess or expired prescription drugs down the drain or toilet, pharmaceuticals are also making their way into drinking water through human waste after people take these drugs. They enter sewage treatment centers, which don't weed out these chemicals before drinking water is processed. | Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN See book keywords and concepts | The two rankest by far were rotting garbage and human waste full of sulfur-containing gases — the very stuff generated in the human gut from soy oligosaccharides.
The Defense Department plans to recreate the two foul smells chemically, but a more natural solution to the human waste smell would be to create it by feeding recruits surplus soy. As yet, stink bomb weaponry has not gone into development. Seems the chief problem to be solved is that of "friendly fire." Whether released by a spray or bomb, it often backfires, so to speak. | David R. Montgomery See book keywords and concepts | So the region's human waste made superb fertilizer—and there was lots of it. Even after abundant harvests the population would not sell to outside buyers. Instead, these practical farmers builr and maintained elegant public outhouses that served as rice-recapture facilities. They routinely ate surplus crops, reinvesting in their stock of natural capital by returning the partially digested excess to the soil.
Today about a third of China's total cultivated area of 130 million hectates is being seriously eroded by water or wind. | | Before mechanized agriculture, farmers cultivated a variety of crops, often by hand on small farms that recycled stubble, manure, and sometimes even human waste to maintain soil fertility. Once farmers learned to rotate peas, lentils, or beans with their primary crops, agricultural settlements could persist beyond the floodplains where nature regularly delivered fresh dirt.
In the Asian tropics, the first few thousand years of rice cultivation involved dryland farming, much as in the early history of wheat. | Mike Adams See book keywords and concepts | Unlike human waste, the manure is not sent to a treatment plant. It is dumped into pits, huge pools of excrement that the industry calls "lagoons." The amount of waste left by the cattle that pass through Weld County is staggering. The two Monfort feedlots outside Greeley produce more excrement than the cities of Denver, Boston, Atlanta, and St. Louis - combined.
Cows are fed chicken litter
The bottom line? Cows are mass-produced under highly questionable conditions. They are doped up with hormones and antibiotics and fed a diet that includes - believe it or not - chicken litter. | by Michael Murray, N.D. and Joseph Pizzorno, N.D. See book keywords and concepts | | TIPS FOR PREPARING
Melons grow resting on the ground, which means their rinds can become contaminated by animal or human waste, or contamination can be transferred from the harvester's or other handler's hands to the melon. Unless the skin is thoroughly cleansed, the knife used to halve a melon can transfer pathogens, such as Salmonella, directly onto the flesh. For this reason, all melons should be sprayed with a solution of diluted additive-free soap or commercial produce wash. Due to its large size, you will probably not be able to rinse a watermelon under water in the sink. | | TIPS FOR PREPARING
Melons grow resting on the ground, which means their rinds can become contaminated by animal or human waste, or contamination can be transferred from the harvester's or other handler's hands to the melon. Unless the skin is thoroughly cleansed, the knife used to halve a melon can transfer pathogens, such as Salmonella, directly onto the flesh. For this reason, all melons should be sprayed with a solution of diluted additive-free soap or commercial produce wash and then scrubbed under cool running water with a vegetable brush. | Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN See book keywords and concepts | The Defense Department plans to recreate the two foul smells chemically, but a more natural solution to the human waste smell would be to create it by feeding recruits surplus soy. As yet, stink bomb weaponry has not gone into development. Seems the chief problem to be solved is that of "friendly fire." Whether released by a spray or bomb, it often backfires, so to speak.
SOURCE: Stink Bomb Science: A Weapon of the Future that Assaults the Senses. ABC News, January 7, 2002. http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/ DailyNews/stinkbomb02OI07. | by Michael Murray, N.D. and Joseph Pizzorno, N.D. See book keywords and concepts | | Melons grow resting on the ground, which means their rinds can become contaminated by animal or human waste, or contamination can be transferred from the harvester's or other handler's hands to the melon. Unless the skin is thoroughly cleansed, the knife used to halve a melon can transfer pathogens, such as Salmonella, directly onto the flesh. For this reason, all melons should be sprayed with a solution of diluted additive-free soap or commercial produce wash and then scrubbed under cool running water with a vegetable brush. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | Here's this place that embodies a history of fear and all the bad things about human waste and pollution and decay, and now it's this container for hope and renewal and reclaiming" (May 19, 2003).
The Red Dive performance was part of the ongoing Peripheral City series, in which artists lead tours of New York's undiscovered, overlooked, or marginalized neighborhoods. | Phyllis A. Balch, CNC See book keywords and concepts | Pfiesteria, a microorganism generated by human waste has reportedly killed billions of fish in the Chesapeake Bay and North Carolina areas, with other kill sites located from Mexico to Delaware. Pfiesteria thrives in unclean waters that are high in nitrogen and phosphorus. This is common near agricultural and industrial areas and it is perfect for Pfiesteria, but deadly for fish. Pfiesteria also affects humans who are continually exposed to contaminated waters, causing symptoms such as lesions, inability to concentrate, disorientation, and memory loss. | Dr. Cass Ingram See book keywords and concepts | Another possibility is if human waste contaminates food or water. This is an indirect means of contracting this dreaded disease. Yet, ultimately, it is human waste that is causing it.
Hundreds of outbreaks of hepatitis occur in the United States every year. Yet, frequently, the source is never determined.
There are perhaps a dozen or more strains of hepatitis, with new ones seemingly discovered yearly. Hepatitis A is perhaps the most commonly occurring type globally. Recently, in the United states outbreaks have been traced to imported frozen fruit, particularly strawberries from Mexico. | Neal Barnard, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Untreated human waste goes straight into the water.1
The mussels that notmally live in the lagoon and canals have had a hard time coping with the pollution, and it shows. Instead of the clean shells and white interior of normal mussels, they are dark and unhealthy and have died out in some areas. The ebbs and flows of the tides help flush out the canals and they are being dredged to remove toxic sediment. Nonetheless, human waste continues to be dumped into the water every day and pollution remains a serious problem.
The mussels cannot climb out of Venice's dirty canals. | John Robbins See book keywords and concepts | In Tokyo, less than 40 percent of the city's housing is connected to functioning sewage systems, with the decidedly unhygienic result that vast quantities of untreated human waste end up in the ocean.2 Taiwan has sewage service for only 1 percent of its population. Hong Kong dumps one million tons of raw human waste directly into the South China sea every day.' In 1993, a World Bank marine biologist, Jan Post, declared none-too-happily: "The ocean today has become . . . mankind's ultimate cesspool, the last destination for all pollution. | John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton See book keywords and concepts | In traditional, agricultural societies, human waste was prized as a prime ingredient in what the Chinese called "night soil"—artfully composted, high-grade fertilizer.
Things changed with the industrial revolution, which brought people together in congested cities, far away from farmlands, where composting and recycling were no longer practical. Open gutters were dug to carry sewage from city streets into nearby bodies of water. When populations were small and water supplies seemed unlimited, the wisdom of using fresh water as a vehicle and receptacle for human waste was not questioned. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | We have food and beverage companies using artificial chemical sweeteners to replace sugar and claiming that their products are healthier than sugar products. And yet, these artificial chemical sweeteners break down into dangerous chemical components such as formaldehyde and formic acid, or they are made with chlorine atoms that simply do not belong in the human body. These chemicals do not appear anywhere in nature attached to a sugar molecule.
Yummy poison: hydrogenated oils
So, what else can the money-hungry corporations think of to put into the food or the water to poison America? | Neal Barnard, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Nonetheless, human waste continues to be dumped into the water every day and pollution remains a serious problem.
The mussels cannot climb out of Venice's dirty canals. But if they could, they would hear the sculpted horses and angels complaining about the pollution in the air. After standing proudly for hundreds of years, they have been assaulted by sulfur dioxide and other modern-day pollutants, causing more damage in the last few decades than in many previous centuries.
You do not have to live in Venice to be confronted with chemical challenges. |
Earth RightH. Patricia Hynes See book keywords and concepts | | WATER POLLUTANT 6: SEPTIC SYSTEMS
Septic systems are small wastewater treatment plants where bacteria break down human waste into simpler components and destroy many riarmful bacteria and viruses. Large wastewater treatment plants usually discharge the treated wastewater into a nearby river, whereas septic systems recharge local groundwater. Even well-designed septic systems release some bacteria and nitrates into the ground, with the septic liquid piped to the leach-field. | Dr. Cass Ingram See book keywords and concepts | Yet, ultimately, it is human waste that is causing it.
Hundreds of outbreaks of hepatitis occur in the United States every year. Yet, frequently, the source is never determined.
There are perhaps a dozen or more strains of hepatitis, with new ones seemingly discovered yearly. Hepatitis A is perhaps the most commonly occurring type globally. Recently, in the United states outbreaks have been traced to imported frozen fruit, particularly strawberries from Mexico. Hepatitis C has attracted the most interest lately; the infection is an epidemic in America. | John Robbins See book keywords and concepts | Chlorination is typically used in developed countries to disinfect water, but water in the Third World is often contaminated with bacteria, viruses, and parasites associated with human waste that are resistant to chlorine. Boiling water is the most common method of killing bacteria, but the fuel needed for boiling is often too scarce or too expensive for the world's poor.
Fortunately, there are other solutions, one of which is the use of solar-powered water pasteurizers. | | One got its water from the upper Thames, while the other drew from the lower Thames, which included human waste from upstream. If cholera was transmitted by water, he said, then the homes using water from the lower part of the river would experience more cholera than those getting water from the other company.
They did. Nearly ten times more.20
Unfortunately, Snow's magnificent demonstration still failed to convince authorities of the need to clean up water supplies. What finally got them to act was a phenomenon that came to be known rather pungently as "The Great Stink. | Linda Mason Hunter See book keywords and concepts | Municipal sewage treatment plants are geared principally to treat human waste and other organic matter so it can be pumped into waterways with minimal environmental impact. Toxic waste from industry, however, remains largely untreated in the process—it is pumped into waterways or trapped in sewage sludge.
IS YOUR WATER SAFE?
There is no such thing as pure water. Water is the universal solvent. It has the ability to dissolve almost anything it comes in contact with. | John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton See book keywords and concepts | When populations were small and water supplies seemed unlimited, the wisdom of using fresh water as a vehicle and receptacle for human waste was not questioned. By the 1920s and 1930s, large cities were piping large quantities of untreated sewage into rivers and oceans, creating serious pollution problems. Septic systems in thousands of small and medium-sized communities were failing due to overloading. Thousands of industries were also producing chemical wastes and needed to dispose of them. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Dysentery can be transmitted by contact with water or food that has been contaminated by human waste. Public health and sanitation procedures in developed countries, however, have largely eliminated this means of transmission. dyslexia (dis-lek-see-uh) Difficulty in reading when experienced by persons with normal vision and normal or above-normal intelligence. A common example of dyslexia is reading words with the letters in reverse order, as in fyl for fly. ear The organ of hearing, which also plays a role in maintaining balance. | John Robbins See book keywords and concepts | The hog waste produced by a single Circle Four Farms hog plant in Milford, Utah, for example, is equal to the volume of human waste produced by the entire human population of the state of Utah. And ever since this Circle Four plant began to operate, health problems in the area have been increasing.
"Milford residents have 20 times more diarrheal illness than Utahns as a whole . . . The rate of respiratory illness in Milford is seven times higher than the state average . . . according to the Utah Department of Health. | | We have strict laws governing the disposal of human waste, but the regulations are lax, or often nonexistent, for animal waste."
—Union of Concerned Scientists"
The scientific name for a toxic microbe that has caused widespread human illnesses and massive fish kills in East Coast waterways in recent years is pfiesteria piscicida. More commonly, it's called "the cell from hell." If you're exposed, you may experience sores, severe headaches, blurred vision, nausea, vomiting, difficulty breathing, kidney and liver dysfunction, memory loss, and/or severe cognitive impairment. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Dysentery can be transmitted by contact with water or food that has been contaminated by human waste. Public health and sanitation procedures in developed countries, however, have largely eliminated this means of transmission. dyslexia (dis-LEK-see-uh) Difficulty in reading when experienced by persons with normal vision and normal or above-normal intelligence. A common example of dyslexia is reading words with the letters in reverse order, as in fyl for fly. ear The organ of hearing, which also plays a role in maintaining balance. | John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton See book keywords and concepts | Joseph Zinobile, a risk management consultant with the Pennsylvania-based Waste Risk Education Fund agrees that "human waste residue can be applied to land in a safe manner." The problem, he says, is that "it is often not done safely at this time. The primary reason that it is not always done safely at this time is a nearly complete subjugation of safety concerns by the US EPA in favor of their concern over solving their disposal dilemma.' "30
Dr. Stanford Tackett, a chemist and expert on lead contamination, became alarmed about sludge on the basis of its lead content alone. |
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