Who remembers the asbestos mats we use to use in school chemistry lessons?
We used to place them on those little tripods and positioned them over bunsen burners to contain whatever it was we were heating up for a particular experiment. The asbestos was set in a thin wire mesh and was often crumbling and disintegrating. I think I only had about two hours chemistry every week so my exposure to those asbestos mats was limited. If I had gone on to take chemistry as an "option" then my exposure levels would obviously have been more. Our chemistry teachers, on the other hand, would have handled these crumbling asbestos mats on a daily basis. I wonder if there are any mortality statistics of school chemistry teachers who taught in schools pre 1980s compared to those teachers of more benign subjects like maths, geography or French.
I think these asbestos mats were eventually banned in schools in the early 1980s.
We used to place them on those little tripods and positioned them over bunsen burners to contain whatever it was we were heating up for a particular experiment. The asbestos was set in a thin wire mesh and was often crumbling and disintegrating. I think I only had about two hours chemistry every week so my exposure to those asbestos mats was limited. If I had gone on to take chemistry as an "option" then my exposure levels would obviously have been more. Our chemistry teachers, on the other hand, would have handled these crumbling asbestos mats on a daily basis. I wonder if there are any mortality statistics of school chemistry teachers who taught in schools pre 1980s compared to those teachers of more benign subjects like maths, geography or French.
I think these asbestos mats were eventually banned in schools in the early 1980s.