Urban Grime Rate - University of Toronto Magazine
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Urban Grime Rate

Study finds hazardous pollutants Read More

Outlawed toxins like PCBs and other contaminants are lurking on the outside of your window, and they could be dangerous to your health. In a study of urban areas in southern Ontario and the United States, Professor Miriam Diamond and her colleagues in the department of geography found hazardous pollutants in the film on windows of buildings. The chemicals, which come from vehicle, residential, industrial and commercial emissions, can be transported thousands of kilometres through the air. “The film and its contaminants indicate the mixture of chemicals to which we are exposed every time we breathe and eat vegetation grown in urban soil,” says Diamond. “We need to be cautious about growing vegetables downtown.”

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Canadian Words test

Over the years, Canada’s vast geography and diverse communities have given rise to a variety of unique words and expressions. For more than 20 years, Sali Tagliamonte, a University of Toronto professor of linguistics, and her research team have been exploring Ontario’s linguistic diversity, from cities to smaller centres… Read More

Prof. Kristen Bos wearing a long-sleeved, black and white flower patterned dress and large purple clover-shaped earrings, facing off camera, with a glass and concrete building and a grassy hill in the background

Test title 3

Prof. Kristen Bos investigates how pollution has affected – and continues to affect – Indigenous communities Read More

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