Far-flung Greenland doesn't seem like it would be a danger zone for hazardous chemicals, but researchers from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program have documented "unacceptable levels" of environmental toxics in the nation's Inuit population. The toxics include persistent organic pollutants, lead, cadmium, mercury, and other hazardous chemicals that are carried by wind and ocean currents to the north and accumulate in animals high on the food chain, such as polar bears, seals, and whales -- which make up the traditional diet of Inuits in the region. Over time, eating the contaminated flesh can cause birth defects, reduced fertility, and genetic damage in humans. In some areas, 100 percent of the population had toxic levels high enough to cause concern, and 30 percent of those tested were above the "level of action" -- the threshold at which researchers recommend that people change their food intake. Levels that high have never been recorded elsewhere.
straight to the source: BBC News, Lars Bevanger, 01 Apr 2003
only in Grist: Hop on POPs —a cartoon by Suzy Becker
only in Grist: Burden of proof —what we don’t know about the toxic chemicals in our bodies—by Elizabeth Sawin in Soapbox
Comments
View as Threaded