2010-02-25 08:57:05
By JEFFREY KLUGER Jeffrey Kluger Tue Feb 23, 12:20 pm ET
It's hard to get too worked up about dust. Yes, it's a nuisance, but it's
hardly one that causes us much anxiety - and our language itself suggests as
much. We call those clumps of the stuff under the bed dust bunnies, after all,
not, say, dust vermin.
But there's a higher ick factor to dust than you might think. And there's a
science to how it gets around - a science that David Layton and Paloma Beamer,
professors of environmental policy at the University of Arizona, are exploring.
(See the top 10 scientific discoveries of 2009.)
Layton and Beamer, whose latest study has been accepted for autumn publication
in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, knew a lot about their
subject even before they set to work. Historically, everyone from chemists to
homemakers has tried to figure out just what dust is made of, and the Arizona
researchers drew their preliminary data mostly from two studies of household
dust conducted in the Netherlands and the U.S. The American survey in
particular was a big one, covering six Midwestern states. Layton and Beamer
also included a localized study in Sacramento, Calif., that focused
particularly on lead contamination. What all those surveys showed was decidedly
unappetizing.
The specific dust mix in any household differs according to climate, age of the
house and the number of people who live in it - not to mention the occupants'
cooking, cleaning and smoking habits. But nearly everywhere, dust consists of
some combination of shed bits of human skin, animal fur, decomposing insects,
food debris, lint and organic fibers from clothes, bedding and other fabrics,
tracked-in soil, soot, particulate matter from smoking and cooking, and,
disturbingly, lead, arsenic and even DDT. (Comment on this story)
"There are more [components]," Beamer says. "Dust is a hodgepodge of all sorts
of things. It would probably be impossible to make a list of all the possible
items."
But dust's ingredient label is not the whole story, since all of those flecks
and bits behave very differently and present different levels of health risk.
To investigate those factors more closely, Layton and Beamer developed a
computer algorithm that looked at the size, source and toxicity of dust
particles as well as how easily they enter the house, if they ever exit and, if
so, by what route. That information, by extension, can provide at least a rough
sense of the dust load in your own home. (See TIME's special report "How to
Live 100 Years.")
As a very general rule, the majority of household dust - about 60% - comes from
outside, through windows, doors, vents and, significantly, on the soles of your
shoes. Smaller dust particles - from 28 to 49 microns, or thousandths of a
millimeter - tend to stay on your shoes. The rest is shaken off inside. A
higher share of the dust that floats in on the air gets deposited, but again,
there's a lot that determines how much any one home will get.
"Here in Arizona," says Beamer, "where we leave our windows open most of the
year and have an arid climate, we would probably have a higher ratio."
Industrial centers or sooty cities have plenty of dust too, though for
different reasons.
There's not much to fret about in simple particles of dirt or organic materials
such as pollen (although they can trigger allergies), but lead, arsenic and DDT
can be a more serious matter. About one-third of the arsenic in the atmosphere
comes from natural sources - volcanoes principally. The rest comes from mining,
smelting, burning fossil fuels and other industrial processes. Even in
relatively low concentrations, arsenic is not without risk, especially to small
children who play on the floor and routinely transfer things from their hands
to their mouths. The same is true for lead, which comes less from wall paint -
the source most people would expect - than from auto exhaust, smelting and soil
deposits. "Lead loading on floors is a key determinant of blood-lead levels in
children," Layton and Beamer wrote in their paper. (See "The Year in Health
2009: From A to Z.")
The fact that DDT is still in house dust is a surprise to most people, since
the pesticide was banned in the U.S. in 1972. But a house is a little like a
living organism: once it absorbs a contaminant, it may never purge it
completely. "Dust in our homes," says Beamer, "especially deep dust in our
carpets and furniture, is a conglomerate of substances over the life of the
home and can provide a historical record of chemicals that have entered it."
The mess that originates within the home is a lot easier to measure and
control. The more people who live there, the more skin that's going to be shed,
the more pets, the more animal fur. And, as Mom always warned, the more you
walk around the house while eating, the more food debris you'll drop on the
floor - which also attracts more insects that will die, decompose and add their
own special zest to your dust. Cook smoke and tobacco smoke, which are the most
obvious contributors when they're being produced, actually make only a small
contribution to what winds up on floors and surfaces. The tiny size of the
particles makes them likelier to rise and adhere to other surfaces or simply
remain in the air than to settle. (See the top 10 medical breakthroughs of
2009.)
It goes without saying that your home will never be dust-free, but there are
ways to reduce your own dust loading - and it's important that you try. Dust
mites, which feed on shed skin, produce allergens that are known triggers for
people suffering from asthma. Same goes for cockroach dust, especially in
cities. No one needs much convincing about the wisdom of getting rid of
arsenic, and the good news is that about 80% of it can be removed simply by
cleaning floor dust regularly.
None of this means that dust poses a clear and present danger or that you need
to take any extraordinary measures. Just clean regularly, don't smoke, eat at
the table - and try not to freak out. Dust bunnies are still only bunnies; you
may just want fewer of them.