History’s deadliest colors - J. V. Maranto

8,084,158 views ・ 2017-05-22

TED-Ed


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In 1898, Marie and Pierre Curie discovered radium.
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Claimed to have restorative properties,
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radium was added to toothpaste,
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medicine,
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water,
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and food.
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A glowing, luminous green,
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it was also used in beauty products and jewelry.
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It wasn't until the mid-20th century
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we realized that radium's harmful effects as a radioactive element
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outweighed its visual benefits.
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Unfortunately, radium isn't the only pigment that historically
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seemed harmless or useful
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but turned out to be deadly.
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That lamentable distinction includes a trio of colors and pigments
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that we've long used to decorate ourselves and the things we make:
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white,
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green,
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and orange.
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Our story begins with white.
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As far back as the 4th century BCE,
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the Ancient Greeks treated lead to make the brilliant white pigment we know today.
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The problem?
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In humans, lead is directly absorbed into the body
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and distributed to the blood,
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soft tissues,
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and mineralized tissues.
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Once in the nervous system,
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lead mimics and disrupts the normal functions of calcium,
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causing damages ranging from learning disabilities
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to high blood pressure.
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Yet the practice of using this toxic pigment
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continued across time and cultures.
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Lead white was the only practical choice for white oil or tempera paint
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until the 19th century.
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To make their paint, artists would grind a block of lead into powder,
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exposing highly toxic dust particles.
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The pigment's liberal use resulted in what was known as painter's colic,
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or what we'd now call lead poisoning.
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Artists who worked with lead complained of palseys,
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melancholy,
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coughing,
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enlarged retinas,
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and even blindness.
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But lead white's density, opacity, and warm tone
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were irresistible to artists like Vermeer, and later, the Impressionists.
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Its glow couldn't be matched,
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and the pigment continued to be widely used until it was banned in the 1970s.
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As bad as all that sounds,
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white's dangerous effects pale in comparison
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to another, more wide-spread pigment, green.
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Two synthetic greens called Scheele's Green and Paris Green
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were first introduced in the 18th century.
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They were far more vibrant and flashy
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than the relatively dull greens made from natural pigments,
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so they quickly became popular choices for paint
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as well as dye for textiles,
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wallpaper,
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soaps,
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cake decorations,
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toys,
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candy,
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and clothing.
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These green pigments were made from a compound called
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cupric hydrogen arsenic.
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In humans, exposure to arsenic
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can damage the way cells communicate and function.
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And high levels of arsenic have been directly linked
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to cancer and heart disease.
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As a result, 18th century fabric factory workers were often poisoned,
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and women in green dresses reportedly collapsed
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from exposure to arsenic on their skin.
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Bed bugs were rumored not to live in green rooms,
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and it's even been speculated that Napoleon died from slow arsenic poisoning
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from sleeping in his green wallpapered bedroom.
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The intense toxicity of these green stayed under wraps
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until the arsenic recipe was published in 1822.
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And a century later, it was repurposed as an insecticide.
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Synthetic green was probably the most dangerous color in widespread use,
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but at least it didn't share radium's property of radioactivity.
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Another color did, though - orange.
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Before World War II, it was common for manufacturers of ceramic dinnerware
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to use uranium oxide in colored glazes.
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The compound produced brilliant reds and oranges,
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which were appealing attributes, if not for the radiation they emitted.
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Of course, radiation was something we were unaware of until the late 1800s,
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let alone the associated cancer risks, which we discovered much later.
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During World War II,
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the U.S. government confiscated all uranium for use in bomb development.
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However, the atomic energy commission relaxed these restrictions in 1959,
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and depleted uranium returned to ceramics and glass factory floors.
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Orange dishes made during the next decade
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may still have some hazardous qualities on their surfaces to this day.
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Most notably, vintage fiestaware reads positive for radioactivity.
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And while the levels are low enough that they don't officially pose a health risk
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if they're on a shelf,
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the U.S. EPA warns against eating food off of them.
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Though we still occasionally run into issues with synthetic food dyes,
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our scientific understanding has helped us prune hazardous colors out of our lives.
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