RADIATION HAZARDS
Authors not listed · 1960
Early 1960s engineers recognized radiation hazards worth studying, long before today's ubiquitous EMF exposures.
Plain English Summary
This 1960 technical report examined radiation hazards through electromagnetic analysis and instrumentation development, likely as part of early efforts to understand and measure electromagnetic field exposures. The document appears to have been connected to the GEEIA (possibly General Electric Electronic Industries Association) educational program during the dawn of the electronic age. While specific findings aren't available, this represents foundational work in EMF hazard assessment during a pivotal period in electronics development.
Why This Matters
This 1960 report represents a fascinating glimpse into the early recognition of electromagnetic radiation hazards, decades before cell phones and WiFi became household staples. The fact that engineers and scientists were developing instrumentation and educational programs around radiation hazards in 1960 tells us something important: concerns about electromagnetic fields aren't new or fringe, they're as old as the electronic age itself.
What makes this particularly relevant today is the context. In 1960, our electromagnetic environment was relatively simple compared to the complex soup of frequencies we're exposed to now. If radiation hazards were worth studying and educating about then, when exposures were minimal, how much more urgent is this research today when we're surrounded by EMF sources that didn't exist six decades ago?
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{radiation_hazards_g4766,
author = {Unknown},
title = {RADIATION HAZARDS},
year = {1960},
}