25 de febrero del 2001
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Smoke and Fog

Smog can be considered part of civilization. The word is well known in many languages and is nearly always used to describe an environmental problem linked to industrial development: urban pollution.

The word combines the two concepts 'smoke' and 'fog.' Among Spanish-speakers, it is often pronounced 'esmog,' and there are those who have imitated the English fusion of words, turning 'niebla' (fog) and 'humo' (smoke) into 'neblumo'.

Smog collects over those cities with greatest gas emissions, taking the form of an opaque haze, generally dark in color. In the 20th Century, there were days recorded in which it appeared to be nighttime in the middle of the afternoon.

In London, there were times when city buses had to keep their headlights on during the day because the sun was eclipsed by the mixture of smoke and fog, which also proved to be fatal. The British capital set some sad records, as the lethal smog killed 600 people in 1948, some 3,000 in 1952, 1,000 more in 1956 and 750 in 1962.

Smog is a chemical mixture of gases. Nitrogen oxides (NOx), volatile organic compounds (VOC), sulfur dioxide, acid aerosols and gases, as well as dust particles, combine to form the haze we see above cities.

The gases originate from industry, automobiles and even from homes, as a result of various combustion processes.

The reaction of these compounds with solar light produces what is known as photochemical smog, whose principal characteristic is the presence of ozone at ground level, a compound that can lead to several kinds of health problems.

You can begin your search for further information about smog at the following Internet sites:

What is smog?
The Columbia Encyclopedia's definition
A chronology of environmental history
Health problems related to ozone
Smog and health


 

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Credit: Mauricio Ramos
 
Credit: Mauricio Ramos