SciShow Tangents - Precious Metals
Episode Date: August 27, 2019Almost all of human culture and economics is structured around a handful of pretty metals that we have arbitrarily assigned value to!  Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out ...topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions!  If you want to learn more about any of our main topics, check out these links:[Truth or Fail]Silver nanoparticleshttps://jnanobiotechnology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12951-017-0254-9https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-05/osu-elc051418.phphttps://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/07/embryo-inspired-bandage-17-times-stickier-band-aidhttps://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-02/ez-pnf021419.phpCopperhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK225400/https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/biochemistry-genetics-and-molecular-biology/copper-toxicityPlatinumhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29632935https://www.forbes.com/sites/carmendrahl/2017/04/14/why-is-platinum-in-some-chemotherapy-drugs-and-can-we-improve-them/#1a89a88417d4[Fact Off]Alchemy and phosphorus:https://phys.org/news/2019-01-phosphorus-years-discovery-vital-element.htmlhttps://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/02/02/465188104/phosphorus-starts-with-pee-in-this-tale-of-scientific-serendipityGold vein earthquakes: https://www.nature.com/news/earthquakes-make-gold-veins-in-an-instant-1.12615https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/earthquakes-are-basically-gold-factories-4659100/[Ask the Science Couch]Nickel allergy/reactivity:https://www.nickelinstitute.org/about-nickel/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4783936/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3047925/https://books.google.com/books?id=CpAM1U1efqcC&pg=PA120Gold allergy/reactivity:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11244133https://books.google.com/books?id=1mk3lFVtBSQC&pg=PA104Implant metals:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9440845[Butt One More Thing]Metals in poop:https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es505329qhttps://www.pnas.org/content/112/29/8803.full
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow, Tangent's Delightly Competitive Knowledge Showcase starring some
of the geniuses that make the YouTube series SciShow happen.
This week, as always, I'm joined by Stefan Tjid.
Hello.
How's your week going, master of producing?
Well, I took the last four days off, so I've been playing a lot of video games.
What's your tagline?
Swedish melodic death metal.
Ooh.
To go with the topic.
Topic, which we haven't discussed yet.
Sam Schultz is also here.
Hello.
Artist and magician, Sam Schultz.
Yes, and what else?
Can you do a magic trick for us?
Whoa!
So magic.
That was neat.
Gosh, wow.
I wouldn't have expected you would have been able
to pull that one off so fast.
What's your tagline?
These pretzels are making me thirsty.
That's the whole thing about them.
Sarah E. Reilly is also here.
I am.
How you doing?
I'm okay.
I was in an airport, well, three airports all day yesterday.
What's your tagline?
Shoot me through that salmon cannon.
Whoa.
Please, please.
That's the noise it makes.
And I'm Hank Green.
I just ate a really big cookie made for me by two men named Lenny and Larry.
And my tagline is vasculated hair.
Ooh.
What does vasculated mean?
Vasculated is like an area of tissue that has blood vessels.
Oh, gross.
So imagine every hair just has a little blood vessel in it.
Yeah.
Oh, your hair would be really heavy, right?
Yeah, it'd be like nice and lustrous though, I think.
Take better care of itself, that's for sure, than these dead protein strands that I have to like spend money buying products to condition.
I need to be conditioned.
Oh, wow.
Every week here on SciShow Tangents, we try to get together to one-up amaze and delight each other with science facts.
We're playing for glory, but we're also keeping score.
And we award Hank bucks from week to week.
We keep track of who's leading.
We do everything we can to stay on topic, but judging by previous conversations and all the blood hair talk we just had, we won't be great at that.
So if the rest of the team deems your tangent unworthy from this point forward, we can force you to give up a Hank buck.
So tangent with care.
Who's winning, Sam?
All right.
So in last place is Stefan with 47 points.
Still last.
Second to last place, Sari with 49 points.
Tied for first, Sam and Hank.
Oh, wow.
I thought Sari was coming up.
Well, maybe you didn't update it.
No, I did.
Okay.
All right.
Now, as always, it's time to introduce the topic with the traditional science poem this week from Sari Reilly.
There are certain objects we treasure and covet that help us express the feeling of it when magic things happen or we see a nugget of kindness or truth or we simply love it.
But if I say that something is worth its weight in tin, it sounds off, like a cobalt mine of information.
Do you want to strike pewter or go for the lead
if i had a heart of calcium i'd likely be dead silence is lithium or iron or zinc doesn't capture
the same feeling i think or all that glitters is not brass sounds like i'm talking out of my ass
though precious metals are precious because that's what we're told. Shiny, rare, and expensive. It's hard to replace gold.
Oh, wow.
Wow, Siri.
That was really good.
There were so many elements.
And brass.
And brass.
And brass.
And pewter.
Pewter's an alloy, too.
Wonderful.
So our topic for the day is precious metals, which sounds subjective.
Yeah, it is.
Okay, just making sure.
Is it totally subjective?
It seems like to me there was something about how reactive or not reactive they were was important to it, too.
But maybe that's just not really true either?
I think when you're trying to draw a hard box, you're going to find some wiggles outside of the hard box.
But, like, precious in that they are valuable, is that really all it is?
I think so.
It's, like, rare, naturally occurring metal
that is valuable according to humans.
And so like our idea of precious metals
have probably changed over time.
Well, I'm saying probably,
have definitely changed over time.
Because right now we value things like gold and silver
and platinum, palladium.
Oh, palladium.
I don't really think about palladium much
except for like catalysts.
Yeah, but industrial uses.
And so those are like the four that keep coming up for modern day precious metals.
What other ones did we used to have?
Was copper precious once upon a time?
Was aluminum?
Aluminum was.
Copper probably.
Bronze in the bronze age.
Yeah.
Iron probably at some point when we only in the iron
age yeah all the ages copper in the copper age stone was a precious metal in the stone age
but yeah i don't know it seems like the precious label is just like
yeah humans like it okay it looks nice pretty yes and that has something to do with its chemical properties
but something to do with this arbitrary societal construct of we decided to say yeah of value and
also like i think that it's to some extent it's you like these are elements that are used as
storage of economic value yeah so like for a very long time we turned it into jewelry and coins and
we're like here are our coins and then now for the rest of human history,
we're going to have this association
between these metals and value.
Right.
Sari, thank you for helping us figure out
this subjective thing,
and also for your really, really great,
really great science poem
that I feel like should be published in a book.
Uh-huh.
Oh.
Are we making a book?
Maybe we should make a book.
I think we should make a book.
I'm going to be on our kickstarter
it's a poetry book
yeah for when you're pooing
I thought it was just poetry about poo
oh
and we're going to start with
Sam Schultz has brought in
three science facts
for our education and enjoyment but only one of those facts
is true and we have to only one of those facts is true, and we have
to guess or know
which one is the true fact to get
ourselves a Hank Buck, and if we get fooled,
Sam gets the Hank Buck. Sam!
Yeah? Hit us with those facts!
Okay. In the field of
consumer products, silver nanoparticles
seem to be having a bit of a moment.
Silver's antibacterial
properties make it an excellent additive
to things like wound dressings,
kitchen utensils, toothpaste, clothing,
washing machines,
like anything that you don't want
to have bacteria on.
They just put it in washing machines?
Yeah, so this is a crazy thing I read.
There's washing machines
that are advertised as not needing
to have hot water to clean the clothes
because they have these plates in them
that electrode off nanoparticles that are supposedly supposed to clean the clothes because they have these plates in them that electrode off like nanoparticles
that are supposedly supposed to clean all your laundry without using hot water yeah love it so
they're like really useful in a lot of situations but there is concern from scientists that
introducing tons of silver nanoparticles is maybe having unforeseen consequences which of these is
a side effect of nanoparticles being introduced into consumer products
and then into the world at large?
Okay.
Number one, the nanoparticles in the human body can cause intestinal problems,
low blood pressure, psoriasis, and can even end up deposited in the cornea,
leading to a silver ring around the eye.
A silver ring around the visible part of the eye?
Like I can see it?
Yeah.
That'd be great.
Like you can see it.
You'd look so badass.
It does sound really cool, but probably not good for you.
Number two, the nanoparticles can enter cells and oxidize, becoming a cytotoxin that destroys the cell.
Or number three, the nanoparticles wipe out beneficial bacteria in rivers, leading to an overabundance in nutrients and causing algae blooms that crowd out local wildlife. I feel really good about the first one, even though I feel like I would have seen pictures of people.
There's that guy who ate a bunch of carrots.
He only ever ate carrots, and he turned orange.
Is that true?
Yeah.
And then there was another guy who ate silver nitrate all the time because he thought it was good for him, and he turned blue.
And so I heard about the orange guy and the blue guy i heard about both those guys but silver i feel like i would have heard about silver eye yeah so
we're guessing on silver nanoparticles causing psoriasis and other diseases and a silver ring
around the eye we've got they can oxidize and destroy cells or they can cause
algae blooms
by killing off
bacteria in rivers
that crowd out wildlife.
The destroying cells
sounds plausible
because our cells
self-destruct all the time.
If something bad
happens to them,
it's like,
ah, something's wrong.
And that's why
silver nanoparticles
are antibiotic
because they cause cells to kill themselves. Yeah. Oh's wrong. And that's why silver nanoparticles are antibiotic. Because they cause cells to kill themselves.
Yeah.
So.
Oh, no.
Now that sounds plausible, too.
How am I supposed to decide?
If I just blow a bunch of silver nanoparticles on Stephano, he'd just die.
He'd explode.
He'd explode.
Burst like a...
Maybe I'll get a silver eye.
Do it!
Yeah.
That's the only way we'll know.
There's only one way to end up.
And if neither of those happens, it's the last one. will know there's only one way to end up if neither of those happens it's the last one yeah yeah for sam's next magic trick give us all silver eyes
are algae gonna be more resistant to the silver like if the bacteria i feel like yes okay i think
yeah like i think that it could be different. It could definitely be different. They're very different organisms.
Yeah, and a lot of things cause algae blooms.
So fertilizer runoff is enough to cause algae overgrowth.
This is hard.
It's hard, but I know the right answer.
Oh, shoot.
I'm guessing.
Just for clarity, I don't actually know the right answer.
I'm going to go with the silver eye because I think it's great.
Okay.
It is very cool.
I'm going to go with
algae blooms
because it sounds weird
and I know
a medium amount
about algae blooms
but not this
and so I can add it
to my algae blob
in my brain.
I'm going to go
with the second one.
Spread it out.
Okay.
Whichever one that is.
He doesn't know.
They all sound equally plausible to me. They do sound equally plausible so the correct answer is number three
go into water and uh so that's basically the long and short of it they end up in the thing and they
kill and they decrease the amount of competition basically and there's too many nutrients in the
water and the algae can bloom and crowd out everything um i think that that is kind of a little bit hypothetical right
now there have been studies on it that have shown that it does kill the beneficial bacteria and
rivers but then there was a little bit more concrete stuff that they're worried that it
could interfere with wastewater treatment because it would end up in the tanks with the bacteria and it would like depress their ability to break stuff down.
And it also ends up in fish.
And this one has a lot more research about it, it looks like.
And it can cause like permanent gill inflammation
and it takes them like six months to get those silver particles out of their bodies.
Oh, no.
So they're just a bunch of little sick fish.
Permanent gill inflammation is a very bad band name.
So it's a jam band and they're kind of low energy.
So number one is not silver poisoning, it's copper poisoning.
So you get a ring?
You get a copper ring around your eye.
There's a picture of it on Wikipedia.
And then number two, the cell death thing,
that maybe probably happens with silver nanoparticles.
I couldn't find anything about it in particular.
But platinum nanoparticles will very quickly oxidize and kill cells.
And they're studying it as a cancer treatment right now.
And it could potentially be just as effective at destroying cancer.
Like they found it so far to be as effective at destroying cancer as chemotherapy
with less side effects.
Wow, that's awesome.
So it was different metal nanoparticles,
all of them.
Yes, different precious nanometal
whatevers.
But as discussed,
copper is not a precious metal.
Okay, well, it was hard to find
a bad gold one.
Gold seems like it's okay for the most part.
Gold's great.
Yeah, hit me with those gold nanoparticles.
You can eat gold all day long and nothing bad will happen to you.
Look, copper's precious to me.
And you can't eat gold all day long.
That's very expensive.
Next up, we're going to take a quick break, and then it'll be time for the Fact Off.
And we're back.
Hank Buck totals, everybody.
A series coming out with two.
Sam's also got a score of two.
Yes, because I fooled two people.
All right. You all guessed a different one.
Yeah, we did.
Only you got it right.
Okay, now I understand.
It all makes sense.
And now it's time for the fact-off,
where Stefan and I have brought a science fact each to present to the others.
And the others have to decide which fact is the most mind-blowing.
And hopefully it's mine, because I'll get a Hank Buck.
Or two, even.
So, I guess we're going to start off, since we're talking about metals today, we're going to go back and forth.
Stefan and I are going to name metal bands.
Oh, cool.
Interesting.
Rings of Saturn.
Pantera.
Nile. Tool. In Fl cool. Interesting. Rings of Saturn. Pantera. Nile.
Tool.
In flames.
Aerosmith?
Oh, no.
Slipknot.
Oh, yes.
Coffin burglars.
Probably.
Probably a metal band.
He's like, Sam's going to have to judge this because these all sound fake.
I was going to look up coffin burglars real quick and see if it's a thing.
Everything is a band.
Coffin burglars band.
It's not.
I could have just said coffins.
Coffins.
Coffins is a metal band.
I should have just said coffins.
Right.
I guess that means I go first or you get to choose who goes first.
Oh, you can go first, sure.
Okay, I'm going to do it.
So, alchemists are very much into gold.
That was kind of the whole thing.
They really wanted people to make gold out of stuff that wasn't gold.
And the key, they believed, was the mystical philosopher's stone, which, true to its role in Harry Potter, was supposed to provide the elixir of life that could help a person live forever.
And also, it would be capable of transmutation, turning more basic metals like lead into much more valuable metals like gold.
The only challenge was figuring out how to make the Philosopher's Stone.
And to this ultimately fruitless end, alchemists had all kinds of ideas.
This ultimately fruitless end.
Alchemists had all kinds of ideas.
Even Isaac Newton took a stab at it with a recipe that called for one part fiery dragon and some doves of Diana and at least seven eagles of Mercury. So in the 17th century, an alchemist named Henning Brand turned to a slightly less esoteric ingredient list than Newton was working off of.
Water.
And by water, I mean pee.
Lots of pee.
Well, it's golden color.
Using this, like, alchemy cookbook.
Exactly.
Using this alchemy cookbook, he needed, and supposedly, 1,500 gallons of human urine.
What?
Brand thought that if he boiled, cooled, mixed, and distilled
the pee enough and in the right
ways, the final product would be
the Philosopher's Stone.
It turns out that he was wrong,
but his efforts were not a
total waste.
As Brand finished up his
distillation, the glass chamber filled
with fumes that turned into a
shiny white liquid that he
named phosphorus, after
the Greek word for morning star
or the planet Venus, the bringer
of light. It took six
years for Brand to be
convinced that he hadn't actually created
the Philosopher's Stone because it
was a really weird, cool
thing that he had made. But in that time
he had learned that this new thing could do a lot of cool stuff, like
glow in the dark, for example, and explode a lot.
And that's the story of how the unsuccessful search for a way to turn lead into gold led
to the discovery of phosphorus, which is the first time an element was discovered basically
ever.
That wasn't like a naturally occurring one
that you would just find.
Oh, cool.
When did this happen?
In the 1700s.
No, in the 17th century.
So in the 1600s.
In his initial attempts to create the Philosopher's Stone,
he bankrupted himself.
But then his wife died
and he was able to marry a rich widow.
Oh, great.
So it turned out fine.
And also his wife, the new widow, had a grown-up son who was able to help him in the lab a bunch.
And also maybe pee a bunch too.
Oh, yeah.
I imagine so.
So maybe it was just he and his wife and his son peed a lot.
Just keep drinking water.
But he actually said in his notes that he preferred the pee of beer drinkers because it had a more yellowish tint, which he thought
was probably more concentrated already.
So the main thing that he did, first
he let the pee sit out in the heat
for a long time to become
really gross and stinky, and then he
distilled it.
So he got all of the water off
the pee, so it was like a syrupy
pee sludge. How? Why?
How long was he doing this for, do you know? Took a lot of time, I think,
to do it. He probably smelled really bad.
I wouldn't want to give him a kiss.
Oh my god, yes. The deodorization
technology was not there
back in the day. Oh, yeah, no.
Can you imagine being like,
my wife died and I need to
continue my alchemy.
What woman can I find to marry me?
To marry the piss doctor.
Like distilled piss man.
But you don't advertise yourself as distilled piss man.
In your Tinder bio, you write alchemist.
Going to make you very rich.
Going to find the secret to gold.
And then a woman might come along and say,
oh, I like gold.
I like gold so much,
I will put up with the pee sludge that you keep in the basement.
I'll let you use my son as your assistant with this pee sludge.
And I will happily pee into the bucket for you.
Yes, for you, my love.
And for the gold that you'll produce.
All right.
Stefan, time for go time.
So earthquakes happen along fault lines.
Tectonic plates be moving around, getting real rowdy,
and then you get an earthquake.
And so along the fault, the rock is just kind of rubbing against each other.
But there are cracks, and they were calling them fault jogs here,
that run out from the faults.
And so those don't experience rubbing of like rock
against rock when there's an earthquake. They just open up a little bit. And so this study from 2013
was trying to figure out what happens in these cracks that are near the faults when there's an
earthquake and they expand. And so we know that like a lot of gold deposits form from like hot
And so we know that a lot of gold deposits form from hot, mineral-laden fluids that are flowing through rock.
They just kind of take gold from throughout the rock and concentrate it and deposit it in cracks. And so the same thing in these fault line cracks, they're filled with these hot, pressurized, super-saturated fluids.
So when there's an earthquake and they expand a little bit, that extra room causes an extreme drop in pressure.
And so the example they used was if there was a magnitude four earthquake,
11 kilometers below the surface could cause a 1000 fold reduction in pressure.
And so when that happens, the liquid expands to fill the space and basically instantly vaporizes.
And so all the minerals and gold and stuff in the fluid is instantly deposited
in these fault jogs in just a few tenths of a second. Whoa, what does that look like?
It looks like a tiny gold vein. That's what it looks like. And like extremely tiny earthquakes
that you could never feel, but we could only detect with like seismometers, can reduce the pressure enough to have this effect.
But you could have hundreds of thousands
of earthquakes per year
and over hundreds of thousands of years,
like that can eventually build up
into significant gold deposits.
Right, okay.
Because these cracks get ruptured again and again.
I love it.
And so potentially this could help us find new gold to mine,
but also they think that understanding how the cracks repressurize after an earthquake can help us understand how that affects how much the ground moves later.
And so predicting aftershocks, that could be helpful if they incorporate fluid pressure into those equations.
This is something that I know so little about that I wish I knew more about, like how crystals form, how like veins of metals occur in rocks.
Yeah, that's how I feel.
Like because we've we've known about like how the fluids like deposit gold over time.
Just not that earthquakes can cause this like instant deposition.
And then that happens over and over again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So like it just keeps re-rupturing and then like there's these just like it just keeps building up over
time the same fault and then you end up with a commercially viable vein i like this one though
because the thing about like you know water vaporizes but all the stuff in the water has to
go somewhere and so it like just rushes to the nearest surface to be like,
I need to crystallize somewhere, somewhere.
This water vapor is instantaneous.
It's like disappeared.
All of my good, my solution is ended.
Panic.
Yeah.
Panic gold.
I love panic chemicals.
I love it when the chemicals panic.
So it's time for you guys to assign your points.
I'm never not going to be on Dr. Piss's side.
I'm going to give mine to Dr. Piss.
Dr. Piss has one point.
I did like Dr. Piss.
It was very good.
But I know nothing about geology.
Me neither.
And so the earthquakes depositing gold minerals and other things is very cool
mine wasn't even really about precious metals
yeah there was no gold
the pursuit of precious metals
the pursuit of precious metals
so I give my handbook
to Stefan
alright it's time for
ask the science couch
where we're going to ask some listener questions
to our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
Sam, hit me.
All right.
At Nits and Laughs asks, is there any reason people are more allergic to nickel over something like silver or gold?
I didn't know people were allergic to nickel, so I should just exit the science.
Is that what turns you green?
Is that an allergic reaction?
That's a totally different.
That's copper.
Okay.
So people are allergic to nickel.
That's more commonly seen in women for the sake of these studies because of the jewelry wearing portion of the population.
Because a lot of cheap or costume jewelry or like the stuff you buy at Target will be made of nickel.
It's like fairly abundant.
of nickel it's like fairly abundant so rings earrings apparently about 10 to 15 percent of the human population suffers from contact hypersensitivity to metals and it's more in
again the they've only studied in women versus men but it's more common in women than men with
about 10 percent in women versus two percent in men. And it seems like it is partially
because of repeat exposure. So this is an allergy that is developed over time as opposed to something
that someone is necessarily born with. And so the more you're in contact with nickel
or other metal alloys that you can be allergic to, the more likely you are to develop a dermatitis allergic reaction to it. If you're in that 15%, does that mean that you are allergic to all of
a certain type of metal? Or is that 50% like some in the 50% are allergic to nickel, some are
allergic to something else? Yeah, I think so. So one study had found that the three most prevalent
metal allergies were to nickel-2- to sulfate, which affects like the larger
section of the population, followed by cobalt chloride, which is about 5% of the population,
and potassium dichromate, which is about 3% of the population. So there are different
hypersensitivities to different metals. And then collectively, it's like 10 to 15%. But nickel
is the most prevalent, and we're not entirely sure why. Besides maybe it's just in a lot of the things that we wear.
So maybe a lot like a lot of contact is happening combined with maybe some kind of your immune system is more likely to identify it as something that might be biological or some kind of invader.
Yeah.
Like it's just your immune system is more aware of it.
Yes.
Yeah.
That is the thing that I didn immune system is more aware of it. Yes. Yeah.
That is the thing that I didn't explain is what an allergy is.
An allergy is when your immune system reacts to something as though it is an invader, as though it is bad and so like mounts an immune response to it when really it doesn't particularly
matter to your body.
Right.
Another part of this is that metallic nickel and nickel alloys are soluble under like water humid conditions.
So kind of like what we were talking about in the definition section.
They're more reactive.
Yeah, they're more reactive.
And well, it also soluble, which means like easier to get into you.
Yep.
So they like the sweat, the salts and amino acids and compounds in human sweat can react with nickel to make it, like ions break off and then it can absorb through your skin.
And then that causes like the release of certain immune chemicals or interacts with certain immune chemicals.
Whereas something like gold is more resistant to chemical attack, like if it's more pure and it doesn't ionize readily in contact with sweat.
So it doesn't end up inside of you as easily.
Yeah.
Okay.
But if people are wearing gold or silver jewelry and having an allergic reaction to it,
that's oftentimes because that kind of jewelry is plated with nickel and then plated with a thin layer of gold.
And so those nickel ions can seep through the gold and into your skin.
And so like more pure silver gold jewelry is usually recommended to people who have this kind of allergy because, I don't know, it's slightly more stable.
Right.
Slightly less likely to trigger this allergic reaction.
In my very quick search of the internet,
I was only able to find one study that sort of confirmed this, but they tested just with a patch
test, which is a pretty common allergy test where they just put a bunch of like very small samples
of stuff on your skin in this case, because it's dermatitis that they're looking for.
And of 4,101 patients that were tested, 33.5% of them had nickel allergies.
Wow, that's a lot of people.
I'm guessing that they searched specifically for people who were sensitive.
Right, who said that they had an allergy.
Yeah, or like who were already in for allergy testing or something like that.
Right, right.
And so preface it with that.
And we don't know why this happens.
We don't really know why any allergies happen.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
It's really annoying because it's a pretty big problem and it seems to be getting worse.
And we have no idea why.
Our immune systems appear to be getting worse.
Like they're not getting worse at being immune systems, but they're getting worse at like not not getting worse at being immune systems but they're
getting worse at like not being too good at being immune systems like they're getting a lot of false
flags yeah interesting huh yeah and so we're not sure what about like we can take guesses
like nickel can dissolve through your skin and it interacts with these kinds of cells because we can do studies about that.
But why in the first place our bodies are overreacting to nickel in this way and in a way that's disproportionate to any other metal that we wear on our bodies?
Why is that?
I don't know.
Is it because we've been wearing nickel stuff or using nickel in a lot of things across history?
And so now something has changed in our DNA.
No one knows. Allergies are weird.
Allergies are weird.
If you want to ask your question to the Science
Couch, follow us on Twitter at
SciShowTangents where we will tweet out
the topics for upcoming episodes
every week. Thank you to
Little Chris, Elliot Sloan, and everybody
else who tweeted us your questions this week.
Final scores.
I came in with one.
Stefan came in with one.
We got a tie for first between Sari and Sam.
Hooray.
I don't think I've won in a long time.
Yeah.
Congratulations on your barely a win.
Yeah.
Shared win.
Shared victory.
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Thank you for joining us. I've been Anne Green. I've been Sari Reilly.
I've been Stefan Juh. I've been Sam Schultz. SciShow Tangents is a co-production
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the mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be lighted.
But one more thing.
Oh.
So there's a researcher who's studying waste sludge,
tracking how metals and nanomaterials and various things that we use,
like soaps and detergents and whatever,
how they were flowing into the environment. So he took a bunch of these sludge samples from across the U.S.
There's apparently a place called the National Sewage Sludge Repository.
Oh, all right.
Where do they keep that?
I don't know.
Indianapolis, Indiana.
Almost definitely.
But so he was looking
at the samples
with an electron microscope
and he noticed
a small amount of gold
and sort of thought
it might be a fluke,
a contamination.
So he was double checked,
investigated further
and came to find
that in these samples
there's gold, platinum, silver
and other precious metals
in the waste.
And the gold was at one part per million.
Some of the other ones were at different concentrations.
That's pretty concentrated.
They don't know where it's coming from.
They hypothesize maybe gold faucets or dental fillings or the gold leaf that you use on foods or if you're chugging Goldschlager or something like that.
It's 100% the Goldschlager.
Goldschlager.
like chugging Goldschlager or something like that.
It's 100% the Goldschlager.
Goldschlager.
But in the U.S., it seems like everyone is pooping out about $13 worth of precious metals per year.
Oh, wow.
We got to mine the turds.
Oh, my God.
Wow.
That's astounding.
It's not that much as I was hoping, you know.
Your government check for $13.
This is how we're going to get to universal basic income, isn't it?
We're going to all sell our shit.
Your poop-fudge dividend.