The periodic table I have comes from Eurographics. I like it because it is in four languages! I bought it at Hobby Lobby, a craft store in my area.
Uranium, even if it wasn't radioactive, is a heavy metal, and that also makes it a hazard. Radioactivity is absolutely known to cause damage to DNA, which can lead to birth defects.
1) where can we find a periodic table like that? I'd like to find one suitable for framing and put it on my wall (I currently have a basic white one stuck to my wall with masking tape).
2) do you think that the use of depleted uranium munitions can be linked to diseases, esp. birth defects?
3) the rather intense response to Japan and German at the ends of WW2 (Hiroshima and Dresden) are really typical American responses to military provokation, as is the Iraq war (via Al-Quaeda & 9/11)
/Thank you for your comment.
The periodic table I have comes from Eurographics. I like it because it is in four languages! I bought it at Hobby Lobby, a craft store in my area.
Uranium, even if it wasn't radioactive, is a heavy metal, and that also makes it a hazard. Radioactivity is absolutely known to cause damage to DNA, which can lead to birth defects.
joannelovesscience 2 years ago
1) where can we find a periodic table like that? I'd like to find one suitable for framing and put it on my wall (I currently have a basic white one stuck to my wall with masking tape).
2) do you think that the use of depleted uranium munitions can be linked to diseases, esp. birth defects?
3) the rather intense response to Japan and German at the ends of WW2 (Hiroshima and Dresden) are really typical American responses to military provokation, as is the Iraq war (via Al-Quaeda & 9/11)
lilmspriss 2 years ago