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Once in a creek or river, mercury travels up the food chain through bacteria, which converts it to methylmercury
-- a potent toxin that can permanently damage the brain and nervous system, especially in fetuses and children. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls methylmercury one of the nation's most serious hazardous waste problems and says it is a possible carcinogen. The CDC says that people who regularly consume tainted fish are at risk of headaches, tingling, tremors and damage to the brain and nervous system. Mining in California's coastal mountains for mercury, which was used to extract gold from mines in the Sierra Nevada and by the military to manufacture munitions, ceased decades ago, but at least 550 mercury mines were left behind. One U.S. Geological Survey scientist says the total may be as high as 2,000. Studies have found that tens of thousands of people in northern California, especially impoverished people who fish to put food on the table, eat fish caught from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and San Francisco Bay, which contains mercury in amounts that exceed federal standards. Abandoned gold and mercury mines have been cited as the source of much of this pollution, which is expected to take decades to clean up. "Kids are still getting exposed to mercury by eating fish, and this is one of the most potent neurotoxins we know of, so it's important for our government to protect public health and make it a priority to clean up these sites," said Deb Self, executive director of San Francisco Baykeeper. The EPA will make a final decision on adding the site to its priorities list after a public comment period and further review.
[Associated
Press;
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