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MERELY DUST.

A microscopist, Mr Dancer, F.R.A.S., has (says the Daily News) been examining the dust of our cities'. The results are not pleasing. We had always recognised city dust as|a nuisance, and had supposed it derived the peculiar grittiness and flintiness of its structure from the constant macadamising of our city roads. But it now appears that the effects produced by dust, when, as is usual, it finds its way to our eyes, our nostrils, and our throats, are as nothing compared with the mischief which it is calculated to produce in a mure subtle manner. In every specimen examined by Mr Dancer animal life was abundant. But the amount of " molecular activity" — such is the euphuism under what is exceedingly disagreeable to contemplate is spoken about — is variable according to the height at which the dust is collected. And of all heights which thes* molecular wretches could select for the display of their activity, the height of five feet is that which has been found to be the favourite. Just at the average height of the foot passenger's mouth these moving organisms are always waiting to be devoured, and to make us ill. And this is not all. As if animal abominations were insufficient, a large proportion of vegetable matter thus also disports itself in the light dust of our streets. And the observations shew that in thoroughfares where there are many animals engaged in the traffic, the greater part of the vegetable matter thus floating about " consists of what has passed through the stomachs, of animals," or has suffered decomposition in some way or other. This unpleasing matter, like the " molecular activity," floats about on a height of five feet, or thereabouts. After this one begins to recognise the manner in which some diseases propagate themselves. This disease is not propagated in any way save one — that is, by the actual swallowing of cholera poison. The minutest* atom into the stomach will cause an attack of cholera. A small quantity of this matter drying on the floor of the patient's room , and afterwards caused to float about in the form of dust, would suffice to prostrate a houseful of people. We can, understand, then, how matter might be flung into the streets, and, .after drying, its dust be wafted through a whole district, causing the death of hundreds. One of the lessons to be learned from these interesting researches of Mr Dancer is clearly this, that the. watering cart should be regarded as one of the important of our hygienic institutions, Supplemented by careful scavengering it might be effective in dispossessing many a terrible malady which now holds sway from time to time over towns.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA18690708.2.21

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, Volume VIII, Issue 542, 8 July 1869, Page 4

Word Count
448

MERELY DUST. Grey River Argus, Volume VIII, Issue 542, 8 July 1869, Page 4

MERELY DUST. Grey River Argus, Volume VIII, Issue 542, 8 July 1869, Page 4

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