07 Oct 2012
Big Apple is a big stink.
An air expert has said Big Apple’s air contains Bacteria, pollen, clothing fiber, fungus, tire rubber, dead skin cells, cooking fat and carbon emissions.
The New York Daily News, under an article titled “An expert finds New York City’s air is full of foreign matter, including and rubber and dust” said that “there’s the expected pollution in midtown and the South Bronx, and neighborhoods with lots of trees tend to have pollen and fungus in the air. But each breath you take — about 33,000 a day — also might include spores, bacteria, pollen, tiny bits of glass, starch and fat”.
The newspaper said, the findings come in courtesy of the air expert, Bill Logan.
“Actually, it’s kind of normal, said Logan, author of “Air: The Restless Shaper of the World.” Air samples from midtown, for example, had a high number of skin cells from all races — a reflection, no doubt, of the neighborhood’s diversity. Chinatown had noticeable starch and fat in the air — “probably from the cooking of rice and noodles,” Logan said, the newspaper quoted.
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An air expert has said Big Apple’s air contains Bacteria, pollen, clothing fiber, fungus, tire rubber, dead skin cells, cooking fat and carbon emissions.
The New York Daily News, under an article titled “An expert finds New York City’s air is full of foreign matter, including and rubber and dust” said that “there’s the expected pollution in midtown and the South Bronx, and neighborhoods with lots of trees tend to have pollen and fungus in the air. But each breath you take — about 33,000 a day — also might include spores, bacteria, pollen, tiny bits of glass, starch and fat”.
The newspaper said, the findings come in courtesy of the air expert, Bill Logan.
“Actually, it’s kind of normal, said Logan, author of “Air: The Restless Shaper of the World.” Air samples from midtown, for example, had a high number of skin cells from all races — a reflection, no doubt, of the neighborhood’s diversity. Chinatown had noticeable starch and fat in the air — “probably from the cooking of rice and noodles,” Logan said, the newspaper quoted.
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