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142 points gmays | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.236s | source
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bell-cot ◴[] No.44467129[source]
How is this even news? I'd think that century-old health data would make it bleedin' obvious that heavy air pollution increases the incidence of lung cancer.
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streptomycin ◴[] No.44467398[source]
A century ago, the idea that smoking causes cancer was quite new and was decades away from being conclusively proven.
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SoftTalker ◴[] No.44467569[source]
Also many people heated their homes with coal or wood and the air quality in houses and cities was pretty bad even if you weren't a smoker. Asbestos was everywhere too.
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jjtheblunt ◴[] No.44467934[source]
> Asbestos was everywhere too.

if you have data supporting that, please share it; it would be interesting (morbidly).

i think that's inaccurate because, while Romans knew of it (Pliny wrote of slaves getting breathing disease who worked with it), mining of it, largely for military uses didn't go crazy until the world wars, and surpluses from mining post wars was insidiously repurposed into the commercial sector particularly in california and in random other regions.

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1. SoftTalker ◴[] No.44474326[source]
Asbestos was widely used to insulate boilers and heating pipes/ductwork up until the 1970s or so. It's too bad it's such a health hazard because it's really a very effective substance for that purpose. It insulates well and it doesn't burn. Also widely used in car and truck brake pads. Sorry that's not really "data" but it is pretty common knowledge.