Effetti biologici delle onde di Hertz
Castaldi, L. · 1934
Scientists were investigating biological effects of electromagnetic radiation as early as 1934, decades before widespread wireless adoption.
Plain English Summary
This 1934 conference paper by L. Castaldi examined the biological effects of Hertzian waves (radio frequency electromagnetic radiation). While specific findings are not available, this represents one of the earliest scientific investigations into how electromagnetic fields might affect living systems. The research contributed to the foundational understanding of EMF biological interactions decades before widespread wireless technology adoption.
Why This Matters
This 1934 research represents a remarkable piece of scientific foresight. Nearly 90 years ago, researchers were already investigating whether electromagnetic radiation could affect biological systems. What makes this particularly significant is the timeline - this work preceded the widespread adoption of radio broadcasting, television, and certainly predated our modern wireless world by decades. The fact that scientists were asking these questions in 1934 suggests an early recognition that electromagnetic fields might interact with living tissue in meaningful ways.
The reality is that we've had nearly a century to study these effects, yet we're still grappling with many of the same fundamental questions about EMF biological interactions. This early research reminds us that concerns about electromagnetic radiation and health aren't new or driven by modern technology fears - they're rooted in legitimate scientific inquiry that began when the technology itself was in its infancy.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{effetti_biologici_delle_onde_di_hertz_g5707,
author = {Castaldi and L.},
title = {Effetti biologici delle onde di Hertz},
year = {1934},
}