A Symposium: Health Aspects of Nonionizing Radiation
Authors not listed · 1979
Scientists were investigating microwave radiation health effects in 1979, decades before wireless technology became ubiquitous.
Plain English Summary
This 1979 conference paper examined the biological and health effects of microwave radiation on humans, representing early research into nonionizing radiation impacts. The study contributed to the growing body of evidence about how microwave frequencies affect human biology. This research occurred during a crucial period when scientists first began systematically investigating EMF health effects.
Why This Matters
This 1979 research represents a pivotal moment in EMF health science when researchers first began seriously investigating microwave radiation's biological effects. The timing is significant because it predates widespread consumer microwave technology and cellular communications by decades, yet scientists were already concerned enough to convene conferences on nonionizing radiation health impacts.
What makes this particularly relevant today is that microwave frequencies form the backbone of our wireless world. Your WiFi router, cell phone, and Bluetooth devices all operate in microwave frequency ranges. The fact that researchers were studying these effects over 40 years ago underscores how long we've known that microwave radiation interacts with biological systems, yet regulatory agencies continue to rely on outdated safety standards that ignore non-thermal effects.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{a_symposium_health_aspects_of_nonionizing_radiation_g6491,
author = {Unknown},
title = {A Symposium: Health Aspects of Nonionizing Radiation},
year = {1979},
}