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Toxic Hazards Definitions

The proposed US EPA weight-of-evidence (WOE) scheme for suspect developmental toxicants defines three levels of confidence for data used to identify developmental hazards and to assess the risk of human developmental toxicity (1) definitive evidence for human developmental toxicity or for no apparent human developmental toxicity, (2) adequate evidence for potential human developmental toxicity or no apparent potential human developmental toxicity, and (3) inadequate evidence for determining potential human developmental toxicity. The scheme may require scientific judgment based on experience to weigh the implications of study design, statistical analyses, and biological significance of the data. [Pg.2662]

Many alcohols including ethanol, methanol, and the amyl alcohols are flammable and exhibit varying degrees of toxicity. The often desired inebriating effect of alcoholic beverages is one manifestation of the potential toxicity of ethanol. Almost all denaturants are toxic by definition. Other alcohols may have other hazards. [Pg.6]

Hazardous Wastes The U.S. EPA has defined hazardous waste in RCRA regulations, CFR Parts 260 and 261. A waste may be hazardous if it exhibits one or more of the following characteristics (1) ignitability, (2) corrosivity, (3) reactivity, and (4) toxicity. A detailed definition of these terms was first published in the Federal Register on May 19, 1980, pages 33, 121-122. A waste may be hazardous if listed in Appendix Wll. [Pg.2232]

Control of metalloid content in natural objects, foodstuff and pharmaceuticals is an important task for modern analytical chemistry. Determination of elements such as Arsenic is necessary for evaluation of object toxicity, since their content in environment may exceed MCL (maximum contaminant level), posing hazard to human health. Elements such as Selenium in definite doses are healthy, but in greater quantities they produce toxic effect. [Pg.397]

HAZARDOUS WASTE An Unofficial class of industrial wastes which have to be disposed of with particular care. In the UK the closest definition is for special wastes . Certain toxic organic wastes, such as PCBs, have to be burned in high-temperature incinerators. [Pg.14]

TLV-C is defined as the tlireshold limit concentration value ceiling that should not be c.xccedcd during any part of the working e.xposure. This ceiling limit places a definitive boundtiry on concentrations of toxic or otlicrwisc hazardous substances tliat should not be exceeded. [Pg.233]

Petrochemical recovered oil. Organic chemical manufacturing facilities sometimes recover oil from their organic chemical industry operations. U.S. EPA excluded petrochemical recovered oil from the definition of solid waste when the facility inserts the material into the petroleum-refining process of an associated or adjacent petroleum refinery. Only petrochemical recovered oil that is hazardous because it exhibits the characteristic of ignitability or exhibits the toxicity characteristic for benzene (or both) is eligible for the exclusion. [Pg.494]

Arsenically treated wood. Discarded arsenically treated wood or wood products that are hazardous only because they exhibit certain toxic characteristics (e.g., contain harmful concentrations of metal or pesticide constituents), are excluded from the definition of hazardous waste. Once such treated wood is used, it may be disposed of by the user (commercial or residential) without being subject to hazardous waste regulation. This exclusion is based on the fact that the use of such wood products on the land is similar to the common disposal method, which is landfilling. This exclusion applies only to end-users and not to manufacturers. [Pg.496]

A waste is toxic under 40 CFR Part 261 if the extract from a sample of the waste exceeds specified limits for any one of eight elements and five pesticides (arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, silver, endrin, methoxychlor, toxaphene, 2,4-D and 2,4,5-TP Silvex using extraction procedure (EP) toxicity test methods. Note that this narrow definition of toxicity relates to whether a waste is defined as hazardous for regulatory purposes in the context of this chapter, toxicity has a broader meaning because most deep-well-injected wastes have properties that can be toxic to living organisms. [Pg.784]

By a strict definition, these electrical and electronic wastes are hazardous. Fluorescent lamps contain mercury, and almost all fluorescents fail the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) toxicity test for hazardous wastes. Fluorescent lamp ballasts manufactured in the mid-1980s contain polychorinated biphenyls (PCBs), a carcinogen most of these ballasts are still in service. Batteries can contain any of a number of hazardous materials, including cadmium (nickel-cadmium... [Pg.1214]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.35 ]




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