When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Agricultural safety and health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_safety_and_health

    The agriculture industry is one of the most dangerous occupations and has led to thousands of deaths due to work-related injuries in the US. In 2011 the fatality rate for farmworkers was 7 times higher than that of all the workers in the private industry, a difference of 24.9 deaths for every 100,000 people as opposed to 3.5 deaths for every 100,000 people in the private industry. [4]

  3. Iron(II) sulfate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron(II)_sulfate

    Historically ferrous sulfate was used in the textile industry for centuries as a dye fixative. It is used historically to blacken leather and as a constituent of iron gall ink. [22] The preparation of sulfuric acid ('oil of vitriol') by the distillation of green vitriol (iron(II) sulfate) has been known for at least 700 years.

  4. Hazard analysis and critical control points - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazard_analysis_and...

    Hazard analysis and critical control points, or HACCP (/ ˈ h æ s ʌ p / [1]), is a systematic preventive approach to food safety from biological, chemical, and physical hazards in production processes that can cause the finished product to be unsafe and designs measures to reduce these risks to a safe level. In this manner, HACCP attempts to ...

  5. Occupational hazards of grain facilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_hazards_of...

    The agricultural industry is consistently ranked as one of the most dangerous industries, with an annual fatality rate (24.9 deaths per 100,000) nearly seven times higher than that for all private industry workers (3.5 deaths per 100,000). [1] From 2003 to 2011, fatalities resulting from work-related injuries in agriculture totaled 5,816. [1]

  6. Chemical hazard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_hazard

    Chemical hazards are usually classified separately from biological hazards (biohazards). Chemical hazards are classified into groups that include asphyxiants, corrosives, irritants, sensitizers, carcinogens, mutagens, teratogens, reactants, and flammables. [1] In the workplace, exposure to chemical hazards is a type of occupational hazard.

  7. Centers for Agricultural Safety and Health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centers_for_Agricultural...

    The Centers for Agricultural Safety and Health (CASH) are a set of 12 NIOSH-funded agencies focused on occupational health in industry involving food or plant products, such as fishing, forestry, and agriculture. The agencies were established in 1990 under the Agricultural Health and Safety Initiative.

  8. Agricultural pollution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_pollution

    The use of biological pest control agents, or using predators, parasitoids, parasites, and pathogens to control agricultural pests, has the potential to reduce agricultural pollution associated with other pest control techniques, such as pesticide use. The merits of introducing non-native biocontrol agents have been widely debated, however.

  9. Environmental impact of pesticides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impact_of...

    Today, over 3.5 billion kilograms of synthetic pesticides are used for the world's agriculture in an over $45 billion industry. [17] Current lead agrichemical producers include Syngenta (ChemChina), Bayer Crop Science, BASF, Dow AgroSciences, FMC, ADAMA, Nufarm, Corteva, Sumitomo Chemical, UPL, and Huapont Life Sciences.