Most cyanide in surface water will form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate.
As long as it has a surface to evaporate, it will degenerate.
Most cyanide in surface water will form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate.
As long as it has a surface to evaporate, it will degenerate.
https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxguides/toxguide-8.pdf
I didn't know that before but it appears cyanide does have a half-life that is a fraction of nuclear waste.
That doesn't make it or the other compounds less dangerous, of course.
We don't know who struck first, us or them, but we know that it was us that scorched the sky.
Fear begins to vanish when we realise
That countries are just lines
Drawn in the sand with a stick
Enter Shikari - ...Meltdown
https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/TSLA/tesla/number-of-employees
Tesla total number of employees in 2023 was 140,473
56.000.000.000 / 14.000 = 4.000.000
That's 4 million per fired employee.
"Ein Verbot der Linkspartei fordert auch niemand."
Er kennt die Mitglieder der Partei in der er selbst ist, wohl nicht so gut.
Ah yes. The speedup-loop.
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/The-Speedup-Loop
Killbot industry: "We would never let a machine make the final decision. There'll always be a human element involved"
Human element:
Hydrogen cyanide will turn into "cookie dough" in 1-5 years. Which is way shorter than "forever".
The way you said it in your first comment made it seem longer lasting than radioactive waste. Which it isn't according to the linked PDF. That is the only point I was trying to make.