A LOW FIELD ELECTRON SPIN RESONANCE STUDY OF THE EFFECT OF RADIATION IN LIVING ANIMALS
Authors not listed · 1967
1967 study directly observed microwave radiation creating harmful free radicals inside living animals using specialized detection equipment.
Plain English Summary
Researchers in 1967 developed a specialized electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrometer operating at 1 GHz to detect radiation-induced free radicals directly within living animals. They successfully demonstrated that microwave radiation creates detectable free radicals in animal tissue, though the technology was still being refined for quantitative measurements. This early work provided direct evidence that electromagnetic radiation generates harmful free radicals in living organisms.
Why This Matters
This 1967 study represents pioneering work that directly observed what EMF researchers have long suspected: electromagnetic radiation creates free radicals in living tissue. Using a 1 GHz spectrometer (close to modern cell phone frequencies), scientists could literally watch free radicals form inside animals exposed to microwave radiation. Free radicals are unstable molecules that damage cells, proteins, and DNA through oxidative stress. What makes this study remarkable is that it provided direct, real-time evidence of biological harm at the cellular level. The researchers were essentially watching electromagnetic radiation create the very molecules that cause aging, cancer, and cellular dysfunction. While the technology was still developing in 1967, the fundamental finding remains profound: EMF exposure generates free radicals in living tissue, providing a clear biological mechanism for the health effects we observe today.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{a_low_field_electron_spin_resonance_study_of_the_effect_of_radiation_in_living_a_g4748,
author = {Unknown},
title = {A LOW FIELD ELECTRON SPIN RESONANCE STUDY OF THE EFFECT OF RADIATION IN LIVING ANIMALS},
year = {1967},
}