Asbestos facts for kids
Asbestos is a set of six silicate minerals which occur naturally. White asbestos makes up 95% of the asbestos found in buildings. It occurs in all parts of the world. It is fibrous, heat resistant and non flammable. These properties made it very attractive as a component in building materials and other products such as insulation and automobile brake pads. People have used asbestos throughout history. Ancient Egyptian people used asbestos. Asbestos is extremely dangerous for human health, as it can cause lung diseases such as asbestosis, emphysema and mesothelioma if the fibres get loose in the air. It can also harm animals such as livestock or pets.
Asbestos was linked to lung cancer in the early 1970s, and was replaced by other materials in most applications by 1980.
Types of asbestos
There are six types of asbestos:
- Chrysotile (white asbestos)
- Crocidolite (blue asbestos)
- Amosite (brown asbestos)
- Anthophyllite asbestos
- Tremolite asbestos
- Actinolite asbestos
Substitutes
- Fiberglass - This is the most popular substitute. Fiberglass is physically similar to asbestos and its safety is also being questioned. Fiberglass has been called "man-made asbestos".
- Carbon fiber - Lighter weight than fiberglass or asbestos, but not heat resistant
- Wood fiber mixed with cement (in non-heat applications)
- Various polymer and plastic fibers
- Asbestos rope can be replaced with synthetic or fiberglass rope.
- Vermiculite insulation is a common substitute, although vermiculite itself can be contaminated with asbestos
- Basalt fiber is a mineral fiber with properties similar to asbestos. It is suitable for high-heat applications.
- Mineral wool is a common substitute that is popular in Europe
- Silica aerogel is the best insulator available. It is non-fibrous and is not believed to cause cancer if inhaled into the lungs.
Images for kids
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Industrial scale asbestos mining began in 1878 in Thetford township, Quebec. By 1895, mining was increasingly mechanized.
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The applications of asbestos multiplied at the end of the 19th century—this is an advertisement for an asbestos-lined clothes iron from 1906
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In Guy's Hospital, London, 1941, nurses arrange asbestos blankets over an electrically heated frame to create a hood over patients to help warm them quickly
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Older decorative ceilings, similar to this one, may contain small amounts of white asbestos
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1929 newspaper advertisement from Perth, Western Australia, for asbestos sheeting for residential building construction
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Wailuku, Hawaii post office sealed off for asbestos removal
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Example of asbestos cement siding and lining on a post-war temporary house in Yardley, Birmingham. Nearly 40,000 of these structures were built between 1946 and 1949 to house families
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Blue asbestos (crocidolite), the ruler is 1 cm
See also
In Spanish: Asbesto para niños