IC 7666 Review Of Literature On Health Hazards Of Metals - I. Copper ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Sara J. Davenport
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
118
File Size:
29576 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

The human race has been exposed to copper for thousands of years, as copper and gold were the metals first used by man (1). if According to Ramazzini (2), "of all the metals that man's ingenuity has contrived to dig out of the bowels of the earth, iron and copper are the most useful, far more so than silver and gold." Workings of copper in the oldest known copper mine associated with the smelting of this metal have been traced back to 4300 B. C. Facts revealed by archeological research in India, Austria, Hungary, France, Italy, and Spain indicate that the use of copper probably began about 5000 B.C. (3), and that about 4000 B.C. a copper age came intermediate between the stone and bronze ages (4). Copper ores are rather widely distributed and are found in nearly every country. Many of the copper minas of Europe have been worked since before the Roman Empire. The must important mines in Europe occur in the district around Huelva, extending into Spain and Portugal. The German deposits are located mainly about Mansfeld (Rhenish Prussia); they have been worked continuously for 1,000 years. Some of the mines in Africa have been worked by the natives for centuries, and China has produced copper from shallow pits for thousands of years. India also has many ancient mines worked in the early centuries (2).
Citation

APA: Sara J. Davenport  (1953)  IC 7666 Review Of Literature On Health Hazards Of Metals - I. Copper ? Introduction

MLA: Sara J. Davenport IC 7666 Review Of Literature On Health Hazards Of Metals - I. Copper ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1953.

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