Quote:
Originally Posted by jjirons69
I work in a lab, Tom, and we have half a dozen spill kits for Hg. You could spend all day doing it the right way or half an hour doing it the efficient way. Just don't eat it or inhale it (which it nearly impossible due to it's specific gravity and it's tendency not to float in air) and it's just another metal. Well, except it's a liquid at room temp. The salts are really toxic but Ken shouldn't have any of those.
Ken, duct tape is your friend!
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In the old days we'd hold mercury metal in our hands.
Vaporized mercury, salts, and especially organomercury compounds (methyl/dimethyl mercury) are quite toxic.
By the 1800s, mercuric nitrate was widely used to soften fur for hats. The resulting exposure of workers lead to a classic syndrome and the phrase "mad as a hatter." In Danbury, Connecticut, a center of hat making, the effects of exposure were characterized as "Danbury Shakes." It was not until 1941 that the use of mercury nitrate in hat making was banned in most states.
http://www.mercuryinschools.uwex.edu...g_in_world.htm