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Multiple Exposures: Chronicles of the Radiation Age
 
 
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Multiple Exposures: Chronicles of the Radiation Age [Paperback]

Catherine Caufield (Author)

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Book Description

0226097854 978-0226097855 April 16, 1990
"Catherine Caufield has written an important book on an important topic:
the history behind the safety standards limiting the effects of high energy
radiation on human beings. . . . Provides an immense amount of information
in a very readable form."—W. Alan Runciman, Prometheus

"From fallout and radon to radioactive smoke detectors and dental X-rays,
Caufield traces the proliferation of the uses of radiation in medicine,
industry and the military, and in generating energy. An intelligent,
non-alarmist history."—Publishers Weekly

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

From fallout and radon to radioactive smoke detectors and dental X-rays, Caufield traces the proliferation of the uses of radiation in medicine, industry and the military, and in generating energy. "An intelligent, non-alarmist history," praised PW. Illustrated.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

These books present opposite viewpoints on radiation. Caufield, a science journalist, sees a threat coming from the radioactive material's "popularity as a medical and industrial tool." Nuclear scientist Wagner and writer Ketchum argue that such "beneficial applications" must be encouraged. Caufield sees the public's unease as a reponse to government secrecy, misinformation, and "guesstimates"; Wagner and Ketchum see radiation as "misunderstood and so unreasonably feared." Both these books offer a historical overview of radiation, but Wagner and Ketchum's overview seems more of a filler between their promotion of the use of radioactive tracers to study brain chemistry. (Today, biological-based tracers can replace radioactive ones.) Both the books ask important questions: Who is qualified to evaluate the social, economic, and political risks and/or benefits that arise from nuclear energy and other uses of ionizing radiation? Are there any alternatives? Are exorbitant means being used to accomplish limited ends? Both books provide good lists of related publications, but Caufield better supports her thesis and supplies more precise footnoting. Both, however, should be purchased for balanced coverage of this important topic.
- Diane M. Brown, Univ. of California Lib., Berkeley
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
At first he told no one. For almost two months, Wilhelm Roentgen ate and slept in his laboratory at the University of Wurzburg, working doggedly to make sense of the strange thing he had seen. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ooo chance, telephone interview with author, live fleet, radiation users, target fleet, collective dose, underground uranium mines, radium poisoning, dial painters, radiation protection standards, radium paint, radiation workers, fallout levels, internal emitters, working level months, erythema dose, maximum permissible dose, accidental death rate, occurring radiation, one rem, occupational limit, internal exposure, many radiologists, skin dose, uranium miners
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Manhattan Project, Lauriston Taylor, Atomic Energy Commission, Public Health Service, San Francisco, Oak Ridge, Radium Corporation, Health Division, Karl Morgan, Los Alamos, New Jersey, Soviet Union, Las Vegas, University of California, Department of Energy, New Mexico, United Nations, Great Britain, John Gofman, Operation Crossroads, Stafford Warren, Environmental Protection Agency, Los Angeles
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