indoor air pollution

The Score

Exhaust from Ice Resurfacing Machines Putting Skaters at Risk

Still want to drive that Zamboni?

An investigative report, dramatically titled “Danger in the Air,” by the ESPN news program E:60 suggests that exhaust from ice resurfacing machines is putting skaters around the country at serious risk. The report faults improper ventilation or unmaintained resurfacing machines, which often run on propane or natural gas, for the hazards to skaters.

Read more, and check out the video, after the jump!

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Laser Printers Pollute the Office


Just when you thought it was safe to hang out in the office, scientists are now reporting that some laser printers are as harmful to your lungs as second-hand smoke. Certain models of the printers emit high levels of ultra-fine particles that can cause irritation of the airways and possibly even heart disease and cancer.

The study touches on a larger and mostly overlooked health concern: indoor air pollution. Most people spend 90 percent of their lives inside—a frightening statistic—yet indoor pollution isn't monitored. Sure, we've booted smokers to the curb, but that hardly helps if we're all still breathing in microscopic bits of toner dust.

Still, not every printer is guilty. More than half of the 62 models tested were non-emitters. But the researchers classified 13 as high polluters. The study's authors actually say that some models produce so much pollution that sitting near one would be the equivalent of having your next door neighbor in cubicle land puffing away on cigarettes.—Gregory Mone

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Footnotes

Sometimes our biggest fear is not knowing what to fear most. Fortunately, the weird science of risk analysis can teach us to judge better and fear smarter

1. Imagine, for instance, that New York´s Central Park was in the crosshairs. The asteroid strike would release the force of a 1,660-megaton bomb, triggering a magnitude-6.8 earthquake, blasting a two-and-a-half-mile-wide crater and hurling trailer-size rocks deep into Long Island and New Jersey. The tri-state area would be toast.2. The world´s first known insurance policies were issued 5,000 years ago to Mesopotamian
caravan operators.3. “You dumbass!” was the assessment of Harvard´s David Ropeik.

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December 2009: Best of What's New

In our December issue, Popular Science names the 100 best innovations of the year: bombproof wallpaper, self-parking cars, the fastest helicopter, and 97 more. Plus inventor profiles and videos.

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