Cyanide
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"All forms of cyanide are poisonous, [including] cyanide salts (such as sodium cyanide and potassium cyanide) either solids or dissolved in liquids, and the gas, hydrogen cyanide (also known as hydrocyanic acid or prussic acid). Hydrogen cyanide gas is commonly called cyanide gas. ... Cyanide salts are used in metallurgy, mainly gold extraction, electroplating and metal cleaning." [1]
Also see Wikipedia: cyanide.
Facts About Cyanide and Emergency Preparedness & Response, Centers of Disease Control.
SourceWatch Resources
- anthrax
- biotechnology
- bioterrorism
- Project BioSense
- Project BioShield
- Project BioWatch
- ricin
- weapons of mass destruction suspected terrorists
External links
- Definition: cyanide, Encyclopedia.com.
- Steven I. Baskin, Pharm.D., and Thomas G. Brewer, M.D., Chapter 10: Cyanide Poisoning, "Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare", Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 1997.
- Facts About Cyanide, ABC News, February 13, 2003.