TECHNICAL MANUAL FOR RADIO-FREQUENCY RADIATION HAZARDS
Authors not listed · 1971
Government experts documented radio-frequency radiation hazards in 1971, decades before widespread consumer wireless adoption.
Plain English Summary
This 1971 technical manual examined radio-frequency radiation hazards, representing early government documentation of RF safety concerns. The manual provided technical guidance for understanding and managing radio-frequency exposure risks during the early development of wireless technologies. This document reflects growing awareness of potential health effects from RF radiation decades before widespread consumer wireless adoption.
Why This Matters
What makes this 1971 technical manual particularly significant is its timing. Government agencies were already documenting radio-frequency radiation hazards more than a decade before the first commercial cell phone and nearly three decades before widespread wireless adoption. This demonstrates that concerns about RF radiation health effects aren't recent developments driven by consumer anxiety, but rather technical realities recognized by experts from the early days of wireless technology development.
The reality is that while we've dramatically increased our daily RF exposure through smartphones, WiFi, and countless wireless devices, the fundamental physics of how radio-frequency radiation interacts with biological tissue hasn't changed since 1971. What has changed is the ubiquity of exposure and our collective willingness to acknowledge these documented hazards in our rush to embrace wireless convenience.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{technical_manual_for_radio_frequency_radiation_hazards_g4747,
author = {Unknown},
title = {TECHNICAL MANUAL FOR RADIO-FREQUENCY RADIATION HAZARDS},
year = {1971},
}