First Sentence:
The movement for increased protection of the environment, which gained particular prominence in the late 1960s in the U.S., and which resulted in the exponential growth of federal and state regulatory structures, represented the confluence of two separate social forces, each with its own long and distinguished history.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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environmental epidemiologic studies, pulmonary function level, environmental reproductive hazards, alternate disinfectants, radiation epidemiology, pulmonary function measurements, hemoglobin adducts, water chlorination, ecologic analysis, chlorinated drinking water, adverse reproductive outcomes, dentine lead levels, waterborne outbreaks, occupational carcinogens, road traffic noise, occupational noise exposure, adverse reproductive effects, water disinfection, cotinine levels, confounding bias, health endpoints, environmental epidemiology, waterborne transmission, surface water systems, air pollution episodes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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New York, United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Health Perspect, Clean Air Act, Oxford University Press, New Jersey, Lewis Publishers, Cancer Inst, National Academy of Sciences, National Academy Press, Bradford Hill, Clean Water Act, Water Works Assoc, Boca Raton, Government Printing Office, Indian Health Service, Cancer Res, Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks, Federal Insecticide, Health Phys, Los Angeles, Weekly Rep, Agent Orange, Biologic Markers
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