
audiobook
by Sir Thomas Morison Legge, Kenneth Weldon Goadby
LEAD POISONING AND LEAD ABSORPTION
GENERAL EDITORS’ PREFACE
AUTHORS’ PREFACE
LIST OF PLATES
CHAPTER I HISTORICAL—CHEMISTRY OF LEAD
CHAPTER II ÆTIOLOGY
CHAPTER III SUSCEPTIBILITY AND IMMUNITY
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V PATHOLOGY
CHAPTER VI
This volume offers a clear, authoritative look at the health hazards posed by lead in a range of industrial settings. It explains how lead enters the body, especially through inhaled dust, and describes the early symptoms and pathological changes that can develop in exposed workers. By linking medical observations with the realities of factories that use white lead, pottery glazes, glass polishing, printing, and other processes, it shows why lead remains a pressing occupational concern.
The authors combine experimental data, statistical surveys, and practical experience to make a convincing case for simple, effective preventive measures. They detail ventilation strategies—exhaust fans, hoods, and vacuum systems—that can dramatically reduce airborne lead particles, and they discuss how legislation and workplace hygiene can protect laborers from chronic illness such as phthisis. Readers will come away with a solid understanding of both the science of lead toxicity and the concrete steps needed to safeguard health in the early 20th‑century industrial world.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (707K characters)
Series
International medical monographs.
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
London: Edward Arnold, 1912.
Credits
Charlene Taylor, Harry Lamé and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2023-12-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1863–1932
A pioneering British doctor who helped make industrial work safer, he became the United Kingdom’s first Medical Inspector of Factories and a leading voice on lead poisoning and other workplace hazards.
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1873–1958
A pioneering British dental surgeon and bacteriologist, he wrote influential early works on oral disease and infection. His books helped connect dentistry with the fast-growing science of microbiology in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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