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Date: | Sun, 11 Jun 2006 23:46:35 -0400 |
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> What is worth mentioning, Japan raises the maximum limit of
> chloromycetin contained in royal jelly from the former 0.05PPM
> to 0.0005PPM.
For those playing the home version of the game, Japan LOWERS
rather than "raises" the maximum limit. Clearly 0.0005ppm is
a much lower limit than 0.05ppm.
"0.0005ppm" would be 0.5 parts per BILLION.
To visualize just how tiny an impurity this would be, lets
walk outside to our imaginary Olympic-sized swimming pool
(50m x 25m x 2m) which would hold 660,253 gallons of water.
Now 660,253 US gallons equals a slightly over 2.5 billion ml,
so 0.5 parts per billion would be 1.25 ml (roughly 1/4 teaspoon)
of contaminant in the pool.
The "former limit" of 0.05ppm would be 100 times as much, 125 ml or
about 4 ounces of contaminant in the same Olympic-sized pool.
And Chloromycetin? Another obscure antibiotic, of course.
(As an aside, legitimate Olympic-sized pools are very rare. The
last one I saw was at the Hotel Renaissance in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, and the time constraints of business meant I never
got time to take a swim, one of many reasons I quit jetting
around and started keeping bees.)
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