Materials scientists say they’ve taken nearly 300-year-old toxic waste—a stockpile of spherical lead bullets from the 16th and 17th centuries, tainted with carbon residue, metal impurities, and the ...
Researchers from Jülich Research Centre in Erlangen, Germany, have proven that centuries-old toxic waste in the form of old lead bullets can still be useful today. The team sourced these 16th- and ...
When a hunter shoots a deer, elk, or other animal with lead ammunition, the damage extends far beyond the target. Upon impact, the bullet splinters into tiny fragments that scatter throughout the body ...
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