Thallium is the chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Tl and atomic number 81. This soft gray malleable poor metal resembles tin but discolors when exposed to air. Thallium is highly toxic and is used in rat poisons and insecticides but since it might also cause cancer (although the EPA does not class it as carcinogen), this use has been cut back or eliminated in many countries. It is also used in infrared detectors.
In addition, research activity with thallium is ongoing to develop high-temperature superconducting materials for such applications as magnetic resonance imaging, storage of magnetic energy, magnetic propulsion, and electric power generation and transmission.
Thallium is found in the minerals crookesite (TlCu7Se4), hutchinsonite(TlPbAs5S9), and lorandite (TlAsS2). This metal is also contained in pyrites and is extracted as a by-product of sulfuric acid production when pyrite ore is roasted. Another way this element is obtained is from the smelting of lead and zinc rich ores. Manganese nodules which are found on the ocean floor, also contain thallium but nodule extraction is prohibitively expensive and potentially environmentally destructive. In addition, several other thallium minerals containing 16% to 60% thallium, occur in nature as sulfide or selenide complexes with antimony, arsenic, copper, lead, and silver but are rare and have no commercial importance as sources of this element.
In June 2004, 25 Russian soldiers earned Darwin Awards or Honorable Mentions after becoming ill from thallium exposure when they found a can of mysterious white powder in a rubbish dump on their base at Khabarovsk in the Russian Far East. Oblivious to the danger of misusing an unidentified white powder from a military dump site, the conscripts added it to tobacco, and used it as a substitute for talcum powder on their feet. http://darwinawards.com/stupid/stupid2004-16.html
The CIA is believed (by its Inspector General) to have conceived a scheme to poison Fidel Castro by exposure to thallium salts placed in his shoes while they were being polished. The goal was to discredit him by causing him to lose his characteristic hair and beard. The scheme progressed as far as testing on animals, but the trip during which the poison was to be administered fell through.
Agatha Christie, who worked as a pharmacist, used thallium as the agent of murder in her detective fiction novel The Pale Horse — the first clue to the murder method coming from the hair loss of the victims.
The 1995 film The Young Poisoner's Handbook was based on the activities of Graham Frederick Young who killed at least three people with thallium in the 1960s and 1970s. Around the same time, an incidence of thallium poisoning was reported in Beijing. The classmate of the victum asked for help through the Usenet newsgroup, which was very new in Mainland China at that time. Such joint effort from physicans around the world to diagnose the case was covered by news report around the world.
The Australian serial killer Caroline Grills was known as "Auntie Thally" for her choice of Thallium as an agent to poison her victims.
In 2005, a 17-year-old girl in Numazu, Shizuoka, Japan, admitted to attempting to murder her mother by lacing her tea with Thallium, causing a national scandal. --, (2005), ''Girl admits trying to kill mom by lacing her tea, "GaijinPot", April 28, 2005. News Source from Mainich News
Chemical elements | Poor metals | Toxicology
Tal·li | Thallium | Thallium | Tallium | Θάλλιο | Talio | Talio | Thallium | 탈륨 | Talij | Talio | Þallín | Tallio | תליום | Talyûm | Tallijs | Talis | Tallium | Thallium | タリウム | Thallium | Thallium | Talli | Tal | Tálio | Таллий | Талијум | Talijum | Tallium | Tallium | แทลเลียม | Tali | Talyum | Талій | 铊
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