Scott_J Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 I know this is a long article, but in the 50's strontium 90 was found in the milk of Eskimo women. It was traced to the food supplu. Tundra was getting zapped with the stuff and their animals and berries were building up huge levels. Like I told allison, does it matter. We are going to kill ourselves of this planet in record time. Toxin threat to Inuit food By Lars Bevanger BBC News Online, Oslo Researchers have for the first time documented unacceptable levels of man-made environmental toxins in the Inuit population of Greenland. There is little doubt the toxins originate from the traditional local diet of polar bears, seals and whales, a diet which so far has been considered one of the healthiest on the planet. Traditional food sources like polar bears are affected The report from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (Amap) concludes Greenlanders should consider changing their eating habits, to avoid possible health effects like reduced fertility, genetic damage and deformities in children. One of the experts behind the report, Doctor Henning Sloth Pedersen, told News Online he considered the findings extremely worrying. "In certain areas of East Greenland, 100% of the population were found to have levels of contamination higher than what we call a level of concern," said Dr Sloth Pedersen, chief medical officer at the Queen Ingrid's Hospital in Greenland's capital, Nuuk. To discover that the food which for generations has nourished them and kept them whole physically and spiritually is now poisoning them is profoundly disturbing Arctic Indigenous Peoples' Organisations "Thirty per cent were over the level of action, which means we will encourage people to take action to decrease their intake of the most possible source of these contaminants, which is traditional foods." Greenland is the only place in the world where people have been found to be above the level of action when it comes to environmental toxins found in the human body. Man-made persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like PCBs have been linked to serious health damage in animals and humans. Together with other pollutants like mercury, lead and cadmium, they are carried north by sea currents and weather patterns. While we need to give dietary advice to avoid the over-consumption of environmental toxins, we must also avoid people abandoning their traditional diet for a western one Jens C Hansen Centre for Arctic Environmental Medicine The toxins accumulate in animals high up in the food chain, and especially in marine mammals, an integral part of the traditional diet in Greenland. But it is also this diet that has kept Greenland's population protected from ailments typically associated with industrialised societies, like heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Doctor Jens C Hansen from the Centre for Arctic Environmental Medicine at Aarhus University, Denmark, called this "the Arctic dilemma". "While we need to give dietary advice to avoid the over-consumption of environmental toxins, we must also avoid people abandoning their traditional diet for a Western one," he told BBC News Online. "This creates other and equally serious problems, like heart and coronary disease. These ailments are already fast taking hold in Arctic areas." Twenty-five years ago diabetes was almost non-existent in Greenland. Today the number of diabetics there is three times the level in Denmark. The Amap report asks Greenland's health authorities to develop carefully considered and balanced dietary advice in light of the new findings. Cultural survival Greenland generates no notable pollution itself, and the Inuit population are in effect suffering from toxins produced elsewhere, by the world's most industrialised nations. In a statement attached to the Amap report, the Arctic Indigenous Peoples' Organisations called on such nations to increase efforts to reduce emissions of environmental pollutants, so as not to disrupt indigenous peoples' traditional way of life. "To discover that the food which for generations has nourished them and kept them whole physically and spiritually is now poisoning them is profoundly disturbing and threatens Indigenous Peoples' cultural survival," the statement says. Stephanie Meakin of the the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, an organisation representing approximately 150,000 Inuit living in the Arctic regions, told News Online all this was threatening the very cultural survival of Inuit people. "Traditional food is what binds the Inuit culture together. The hunt and the sharing of the food is very important," she said. "When this is compromised, not only do they lose confidence in their food - they lose part of their culture and in fact spirituality". Quote
Off_White Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 Everybody sing: "It's a small world after all, it's a small...." Quote
Attitude Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 sisu_suomi said: We are going to kill ourselves of this planet in record time. What is the current record time? Was it verified? Quote
Dru Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 sisu_suomi said: I know this is a long article, but in the 50's strontium 90 was found in the milk of Eskimo women. It was traced to the food supplu. Tundra was getting zapped with the stuff and their animals and berries were building up huge levels. Like I told allison, does it matter. We are going to kill ourselves of this planet in record time. Toxin threat to Inuit food By Lars Bevanger BBC News Online, Oslo Researchers have for the first time documented unacceptable levels of man-made environmental toxins in the Inuit population of Greenland. There is little doubt the toxins originate from the traditional local diet of polar bears, seals and whales, a diet which so far has been considered one of the healthiest on the planet. Traditional food sources like polar bears are affected The report from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (Amap) concludes Greenlanders should consider changing their eating habits, to avoid possible health effects like reduced fertility, genetic damage and deformities in children. One of the experts behind the report, Doctor Henning Sloth Pedersen, told News Online he considered the findings extremely worrying. "In certain areas of East Greenland, 100% of the population were found to have levels of contamination higher than what we call a level of concern," said Dr Sloth Pedersen, chief medical officer at the Queen Ingrid's Hospital in Greenland's capital, Nuuk. To discover that the food which for generations has nourished them and kept them whole physically and spiritually is now poisoning them is profoundly disturbing Arctic Indigenous Peoples' Organisations "Thirty per cent were over the level of action, which means we will encourage people to take action to decrease their intake of the most possible source of these contaminants, which is traditional foods." Greenland is the only place in the world where people have been found to be above the level of action when it comes to environmental toxins found in the human body. Man-made persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like PCBs have been linked to serious health damage in animals and humans. Together with other pollutants like mercury, lead and cadmium, they are carried north by sea currents and weather patterns. While we need to give dietary advice to avoid the over-consumption of environmental toxins, we must also avoid people abandoning their traditional diet for a western one Jens C Hansen Centre for Arctic Environmental Medicine The toxins accumulate in animals high up in the food chain, and especially in marine mammals, an integral part of the traditional diet in Greenland. But it is also this diet that has kept Greenland's population protected from ailments typically associated with industrialised societies, like heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Doctor Jens C Hansen from the Centre for Arctic Environmental Medicine at Aarhus University, Denmark, called this "the Arctic dilemma". "While we need to give dietary advice to avoid the over-consumption of environmental toxins, we must also avoid people abandoning their traditional diet for a Western one," he told BBC News Online. "This creates other and equally serious problems, like heart and coronary disease. These ailments are already fast taking hold in Arctic areas." Twenty-five years ago diabetes was almost non-existent in Greenland. Today the number of diabetics there is three times the level in Denmark. The Amap report asks Greenland's health authorities to develop carefully considered and balanced dietary advice in light of the new findings. Cultural survival Greenland generates no notable pollution itself, and the Inuit population are in effect suffering from toxins produced elsewhere, by the world's most industrialised nations. In a statement attached to the Amap report, the Arctic Indigenous Peoples' Organisations called on such nations to increase efforts to reduce emissions of environmental pollutants, so as not to disrupt indigenous peoples' traditional way of life. "To discover that the food which for generations has nourished them and kept them whole physically and spiritually is now poisoning them is profoundly disturbing and threatens Indigenous Peoples' cultural survival," the statement says. Stephanie Meakin of the the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, an organisation representing approximately 150,000 Inuit living in the Arctic regions, told News Online all this was threatening the very cultural survival of Inuit people. "Traditional food is what binds the Inuit culture together. The hunt and the sharing of the food is very important," she said. "When this is compromised, not only do they lose confidence in their food - they lose part of their culture and in fact spirituality". Sisu its been a problem in the North for a long time. Current issue is not Sr-90 but dioxins, furans, PCBs. They are fucked no matter which diet they choose. Hear disease, obesity, and diabetes, or endocrine disruption, sterility and cancer. sort of like the Pacific Islanders whose islands are being covered by rising sea levels. What are they supposed to do, pack it in and move to East LA? Of course, the Makah whaling hunt was shut down because the EPA tested and found that the whale meat qualified as toxic waste and could not be eaten. Quote
To_The_Top Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 The radioactive fallout from Chernobyl nearly crushed the Lappland culture (region/population in Northern Sweden) source of food and income. The radiation settled into the lichen the reindeer eat and then contaminated the meat, and most had to be destroyed. The lichen live for a very long time and is still radioactive, and probably still contaminating the reindeer. Quote
catbirdseat Posted April 1, 2003 Posted April 1, 2003 The latest news in today's Seattle Times is about Bisphenol A. This chemical is used in the plastics you store your food in. It causes birth defects, like Down's Syndrome. Quote
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