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Undark

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1921 advertisement for Undark
Logo for the digital magazine Undark (undark.org)

Undark was a trade name for luminous paint made with a mixture of radioactive radium and zinc sulfide, as produced by the U.S. Radium Corporation between 1917 and 1938. It was used primarily in watch and clock dials. The people working in the industry who applied the radioactive paint became known as the Radium Girls, because many of them became ill and some died from exposure to the radiation emitted by the radium contained within the product. The product was the direct cause of Radium jaw in the dial painters. Undark was also available as a kit for general consumer use and marketed as glow-in-the-dark paint.

In 2016, the brand name Undark re-emerged as the title of a digital science magazine based at MIT and funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.[1] The magazine title — in part an homage to the Radium Girls[2] — has a stated mission of covering science "as a frequently wondrous, sometimes contentious, and occasionally troubling byproduct of human culture."[3]

Similar products

Mixtures similar to Undark, consisting of radium and zinc sulphide were used by other companies. Trade names include:

and

  • Marvelite used by Cold Light Manufacturing Company (a subsidiary of the Radium Company of Colorado)

See also

Further reading

  • Clark, Claudia. (1987). Radium Girls: Women and Industrial Health Reform, 1910-1935. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4640-6.
  • Ross Mullner. (1999) Deadly Glow. The Radium Dial Worker Tragedy. American Public Health Association. ISBN 0-87553-245-4.
  • National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements. "Radiation Exposure from Consumer Products and Miscellaneous Sources. NCRP Report No. 56. 1977.
  • Scientific American (Macklis RM, The great radium scandal. Sci.Am. 1993 Aug: 269(2):94-99)

References

  1. ^ "Can Undark go where no other online science mag has gone before?". Retrieved 2016-09-23.
  2. ^ "Undark: Why Science Journalism Matters". Retrieved 2016-09-23.
  3. ^ "About Us - Undark". Retrieved 2016-09-23.