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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!torn!newshost.uwo.ca!prism!jdnicoll
- From: jdnicoll@prism.ccs.uwo.ca (James Davis Nicoll)
- Subject: Re: Net's Funniest Kitchen Disasters
- Organization: University of Western Ontario, London
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 18:34:58 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.183458.3066@julian.uwo.ca>
- References: <1992Dec30.001435.9345@samba.oit.unc.edu> <1992Dec30.104450.27257@netcom.com> <1992Dec30.152316.6683@spider.co.uk>
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-
- In article <1992Dec30.152316.6683@spider.co.uk> brianw@spider.co.uk (Brian Wyld) writes:
- >
- >One of the technicians did tell me about when she worked at Glasgow
- >University, and they had a little problem with some cesium. Apparently, the
- >stores there had some rather OLD sections, and they were having a clearout.
- >On one shelf were some bottles so old that the labels had given up long ago,
- >and fallen off somewhere. They were filled with lumps of stuff in a clear
- >liquid....
- >
- >The common practice when opening such bottles, in order to avoid any risk of
- >releasing poisonous compounds, is to, ah, open them under water....
- >
- >A fair sized explosion followed, several people were hurt and that sink was
- >never the same again. I think they opened the other bottles with a little
- >more care....
- >
- Back in 1980, I was hired to count and record the contents of a
- local university's collection of waste chemicals. One of the more interesting
- bottles was labeled 'picric acid' (sp?), which is fairly unstable when
- crystalised. The bottle had no fluids in it, so I decided to treat
- it as though it had crystals in it, and not move it until I had informed
- my boss. However, being young and stupid, I also decided to continue
- inventorying. The next container was full of silver nitrate, so I
- marked it and moved it to the section I was storing the containers
- I had dealt with, without much concern, since I didn't regard it as
- a potential bomb. In doing so, I clipped the alleged picric acid with
- my elbow, knocking it onto the floor, between me and the door and on
- the other side of a bucket of lithium pellets. As it turned out,
- it was just an empty bottle with a misleading label, but I didn't
- know that as it was falling. Most stressful...
-
- James Nicoll
-