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Smog and Soot

Smog occurs when fossil fuel emissions react with sunlight and can irritate eyes and lungs, especially in children, seniors, and outdoor workers. Soot contains tiny particles that penetrate deeply into lungs and bloodstream, potentially worsening conditions like bronchitis and triggering heart attacks. Hazardous air pollutants like benzene, dioxins, mercury, and lead pose severe health risks, even in small amounts, with short term effects like irritation and long term impacts such as cancer, impaired brain development, and reduced IQ. Greenhouse gases, particularly carbon dioxide and methane, trap heat and lead to climate change effects like rising seas and extreme weather, as well as increased illnesses and deaths from heat. Pollen
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views1 page

Smog and Soot

Smog occurs when fossil fuel emissions react with sunlight and can irritate eyes and lungs, especially in children, seniors, and outdoor workers. Soot contains tiny particles that penetrate deeply into lungs and bloodstream, potentially worsening conditions like bronchitis and triggering heart attacks. Hazardous air pollutants like benzene, dioxins, mercury, and lead pose severe health risks, even in small amounts, with short term effects like irritation and long term impacts such as cancer, impaired brain development, and reduced IQ. Greenhouse gases, particularly carbon dioxide and methane, trap heat and lead to climate change effects like rising seas and extreme weather, as well as increased illnesses and deaths from heat. Pollen
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Smog and soot

These are the two most prevalent types of air pollution. Smog occurs when emissions from
combusting fossil fuels react with sunlight. Soot is made up of tiny particles of chemicals, soil,
smoke, dust, or allergens—in the form of either gas or solids—that are carried in the air.

Smog can irritate the eyes and throat and also damage the lungs, especially those of children,
senior citizens, and people who work or exercise outdoors. It’s even worse for people who have
asthma or allergies: these extra pollutants can intensify their symptoms and trigger asthma
attacks. The tiniest airborne particles in soot, whether gaseous or solid, are especially dangerous
because they can penetrate the lungs and bloodstream and worsen bronchitis, lead to heart
attacks, and even hasten death

Hazardous air pollutants


A number of air pollutants pose severe health risks and can sometimes be fatal even in small
amounts

Benzene, classified as a carcinogen by the EPA, can cause eye, skin, and lung irritation in the
short term and blood disorders in the long term. Dioxins, more typically found in food but also
present in small amounts in the air, can affect the liver in the short term and harm the immune,
nervous, and endocrine systems as well as reproductive functions. Mercury attacks the central
nervous system. In large amounts, lead can damage children’s brains and kidneys, and even
minimal exposure can affect children’s IQ and ability to learn.

Greenhouse gases
By trapping the earth’s heat in the atmosphere, greenhouse gases lead to warmer temperatures,
which in turn lead to the hallmarks of climate change: rising sea levels, more extreme weather,
heat-related deaths, and the increased transmission of infectious diseases. In 2018 carbon
dioxide accounted for 81 percent of the country’s total greenhouse gas emissions, and methane
made up 10 percent.

Pollen and mold


Mold and allergens from trees, weeds, and grass are also carried in the air, are exacerbated by
climate change, and can be hazardous to health. Though they aren’t regulated and are less
directly connected to human actions, they can be considered a form of air pollution.

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