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Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.
The most dangerous substance ever sold as a health tonic glows faintly blue in the dark. It warms itself to several degrees above ambient temperature simply by existing. And it has been destroying human bodies for more than a century, its half-life of 1,600 years ensuring that the evidence of what it did will outlast every institution that once denied it.In 1927, a forensic pathologist in New Jersey placed a Geiger counter beside the exhumed skeleton of a twenty-four-year-old factory worker named Mollie Maggia. She had been dead for five years. The instrument registered clearly. Her bones were still radioactive.THE LAST READING OF THE RADIUM DIAL is the forensic history of what radiation does to the human body, told through the lives of the people who found out first. It begins in Marie Curie's leaking Paris shed, where radioactivity was first named and the future was unknowingly set in motion, then moves to the luminous dial-painting factories of New Jersey and Illinois, where hundreds of young women were paid to lip-point radium-laced brushes dozens of times per hour, every working day, for years. Nobody told them what they were swallowing.Their suffering generated the foundational science of radiation biology, produced the world's first occupational dose limits, and launched one of the most consequential corporate cover-up cases in American legal history. The same evidence that established liability in court compelled the creation of the International Commission on Radiological Protection in 1928, the body whose standards still govern nuclear worker safety worldwide.From that courtroom, Dr. Cora Dimmick traces radiation's expanding circle of human cost across the twentieth century. She documents the Life Span Study of Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, which has followed 94,000 people for over seventy years. She reconstructs the Cold War in strontium-90, detectable in the baby teeth of American children born during atmospheric weapons testing. She follows the fire inside Chernobyl's Reactor Number Four at 1:23 in the morning of April 26, 1986, and the thyroid cancer epidemic that swept Belarus and Ukraine. She examines Fukushima through modern forensic capability, where biological dosimetry tools characterized the exposure of an entire population in near real time.Rigorous without being inaccessible, infuriating without being polemical, and propulsive from the first page to the last, this is the definitive account of radiation's century-long human cost. The radium dial is still ticking. This book explains exactly what it has been telling us.
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