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- GRAPEVINE, Page 15A Hidden Danger In the Shells?
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by Daniel S. Levy
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- Some soldiers who fought in the gulf may have been exposed
- to a battlefield risk that won't show itself for years. M1A1
- Abrams tanks and A-10 Thunderbolt fighter-bombers fired
- thousands of high-velocity shells that are made with depleted
- uranium, an extremely heavy metal that enables the weapons to
- penetrate the armor of enemy tanks. On impact, radioactive
- oxidized uranium is released into the air, which may have
- exposed anyone downwind to a lung-cancer risk. The Army and Air
- Force have judged the use of these shells to be safe. Yet
- concern over the hazards of depleted uranium goes back to at
- least 1980, when a New York plant that fabricated the shells
- from uranium metal chips was shut down. State health officials
- were concerned because radioactive emissions in the area around
- the building were as much as 25 times as high as levels that
- were deemed safe under local law.
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