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| fig.1 map of Meuse valley between Liege and Huy in 1930, indicating the fog-covered area and location of fatalities and factories |
According to Benoit Nemery et al, a professor at Faculty of Medicine, the average age of 48 of the victims listed in newspaper reports, the average age was around 62, ranging from 20 to 89 years. The major symptom was dyspnea (shortness of breath) and was possibly caused by pure carbon dust particles of 0.5 to 1.35 μm diameter floating in the air. The estimated sulfur dioxide concentration was 9.6 to 38.4 ppm, while the actual concentrations of air pollutants were not recorded in this area. There were some argued that fluorides were the one contributed to the mortality and morbidity, instead of sulfur dioxide.
Although there were warning about incidents like the one took place in Meuse Valley might happen again under similar conditions, people at that time were not fully aware of the impact of industrial pollution on human health yet. The loss in Meuse valley did not prevent same events happening in Donora in 1948 and in London in 1952. The global sulfur dioxide emission dropped temporarily in the 1930s, yet kept increasing until 1980 (fig.2).
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| fig.2 Global sulfur emission from 1850 to 2000 |


Hi Kundi, great blog you have here! I don't know what posts you have coming up, but it would be really interesting if you could discuss what governments are currently doing in relation to air pollution, and whether their efforts are sufficient. I was also wondering if there is some sort of international body that assesses the air quality by country, and if they have any regulatory power?
ReplyDeleteHi Bev, thanks for leaving a comment! I'm going to talk about the regulation of sulphur dioxide in my next post, and I'll use this 'case-pollutant-regulation' pattern for other pollutants as well. Hope you will find them useful ;-)
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