Mark Whiteside
Florida Department of Health
24 Papers
231 Citations
Mark Whiteside is an academic researcher from Florida Department of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fly ash & Particulate pollution. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 24 publications.
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Papers
Deadly Ultraviolet UV-C and UV-B Penetration to Earth’s Surface: Human and Environmental Health Implications
TL;DR: Herndon et al. as mentioned in this paper demonstrated conclusively that all wavelengths in the spectral range 200-400 nm reach Earth's surface, contrary to the widespread perception that all UV-C and the majority of UV-B never reach the surface.
Further Evidence of Coal Fly Ash Utilization in Tropospheric Geoengineering: Implications on Human and Environmental Health
J Herndon,Mark Whiteside +1 more
TL;DR: Herndon et al. as discussed by the authors showed that coal fly ash is the main aerosolized particulate used for tropospheric geoengineering, which can release a host of toxic chemicals including neuro-toxic aluminum in a chemically mobile form and carcinogens such as arsenic, hexavalent chromium, and the radioactive elements, uranium, thorium and their daughter products.
Further Evidence that Particulate Pollution is the Principal Cause of Global Warming: Humanitarian Considerations
J. Marvin Herndon,Mark Whiteside +1 more
TL;DR: A review of published data from the 1980 Mt. St. Helens volcanic eruption and diurnal temperature range data provide further new evidence that particulate pollution, not CO2, is the main cause of global warming as mentioned in this paper.
Contamination of the Biosphere with Mercury: Another Potential Consequence of On-going Climate Manipulation Using Aerosolized Coal Fly Ash
J Herndon,Mark Whiteside +1 more
TL;DR: Herndon and Whiteside as discussed by the authors used inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS) to investigate evidence bearing on the composition of geoengineering material, and found that coal fly ash is the primary component dispersed in the atmosphere for geoengineering purposes.
Fifty Years after “How to Wreck the Environment”: Anthropogenic Extinction of Life on Earth
TL;DR: Herndon et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed Gordon J. F. MacDonald's suggestions of environmental warfare strategies in light of subsequent technological advances, and in the context of actual deployment of the war methods he described.