I think that part of the issue is 'what is asbestos?' There are about half a dozen minerals referred to as such, but for Australian purposes there are only two significant ones, Chrysotile and crocidolite. Both of these have been widely used in this country and marketed as asbestos, and are sometimes referred to as 'white asbestos' and 'blue asbestos'. Up until about the 1960s chrysotile was used almost exclusively in this country, but new mines then began to supply large quantities of crocidolite, and the two were used more or less interchangeably.
While both are rated as carcinogenic, crocidolite is considered to be much more dangerous, perhaps because the fibres are more brittle, so that they break more readily into particles small enough to reach the lungs when inhaled (most particles inhaled are trapped in the nose or bronchial system and eventually rejected (sneeze, nose blow or cough).
The only person I know who has died from asbestos related disease was a close friend whose exposure was attributed to RN National Service where he was exposed to deteriorating pipe lagging in ships fifty years earlier - he reported visibility being affected in some compartments by the haze of asbestos particles when under way. My brother in law died in his eighties, not from asbestos related disease, despite working in an asbestos factory for thirty years up to 1970 (less war service).
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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