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Dust versus Dust: Aluminum Therapy and Silicosis in the Canadian and Global Mining Industries

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Dust versus Dust: Aluminum Therapy and Silicosis in the Canadian and Global Mining Industries
Abstract
By the 1930s, silicosis – a debilitating lung disease caused by the inhalation of silica dust – had reached epidemic proportions among miners in the gold-producing Porcupine region of northern Ontario. In response, industrial doctors at the McIntyre Mine began to test aluminum powder as a possible prophylactic against the effects of silica dust. In 1944, the newly created McIntyre Research Foundation began distributing aluminum powder throughout Canada and exported this new therapy to mines across the globe. The practice continued until the 1980s despite a failure to replicate preventative effects of silicosis and emerging evidence of adverse neurological impacts among long-time recipients of aluminum therapy. Situated at the intersection of labour, health, science, and environmental histories, this article argues that aluminum therapy represents an extreme and important example where industry and health researchers collaborated on quick-fix “miracle cures” rather than the systemic (and more expensive) changes to the underground environment necessary to reduce the risk of silicosis.
Publication
Canadian Historical Review
Volume
102
Issue
1
Pages
1-26
Date
2021
Language
English
ISSN
0008-3755
Accessed
4/3/25, 5:27 PM
Extra
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Citation
Jorgenson, M., & Sandlos, J. (2021). Dust versus Dust: Aluminum Therapy and Silicosis in the Canadian and Global Mining Industries. Canadian Historical Review, 102(1), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.3138/chr-2019-0049