My wife collects uranium glass. It’s mostly safe. Most uranium glass has very little uranium in it and that is mostly sealed away within the glass. However, like lead crystal glass, very very very tiny amounts can leach out over time and end up in food or drink. The amount that can leach out like this is not going to cause any problems for you. Still, wash before and after use to further minimize contamination and don’t used chipped or scratched glass that could shed larger particles.
I wouldn’t use them as my every day plates but for special occasions it’s a fun conversation starter.
Excuse my ignorance but what is washing gonna do? Also did you tried using a geiger counter?
“what the fuck is this”
“it’s uranium”
sounds like a fun conversation indeed
When its lights in my pc at 40 I’m juvenile but when its your dinnerwear its kooky and fun…
Me & my date at the sublime Xbox restaurant I franchise with a portion of my ample fortune
Me after dinner
Matchy matchy
Eggs at thanksgiving??? No. It’s not safe. It’s going to cause stinky farts in the house, at max capacity! 200 people, all egg farting in one house???
Pretty sure you need gas masks.
Why do so many people get gassey eating eggs? I can eat over a dozen deviled eggs in one sitting and not have a single issue
I get gassy with eggy farts if someone else has eggs. What’s up with that?
yeah, because everyone else has an issue with your weird farts, Ted.
Username checks out
It helps that eggs are a large part of my diet. I just fuckin love eggs.
Yeah its safe. Your aunties nasty ass jello salad with banana’s in it is giving you far more radiation exposure than those plates, because you put it inside you.
You could put one of those candle holders inside you if you’re so inclined.
paige no
Is there something specific about bananas or is it just the go to stand in for saying that even fruit entire radiation?
The potassium taken up by banana plants during growth has radioactive isotopes which are concentrated in the fruiting bodies.
It’s well-enough documented that there’s an informal unit of measurement for it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banana_equivalent_dose
Ugh… They actually use bananas for scale…
Ironically though, your body doesn’t really store excess potassium. When you eat a banana, you’re only replacing a banana’s worth of potassium within your body, so it ends up being largely net 0 in terms of a radiation dose, even though it’s radioactive.
But you could exchange non-radioactive isotopes for the radioactive ones bananas are rich in, right?
Most of the respondents to your comment focused on the bananas themselves as being the issue, but they are actually missing the point somewhat. Bananas do have more potassium and are more radioactive than other fruit, but actually, its the “putting them inside you” which is the much larger issue. The inverse square law applies to all forms of radiation and you’ve effectively reduced that to 0 by ingesting the thing which is radioactive. So instead of absorbing a small fraction of the total radiation emitted by the thing over time, you are exposed to ALL of the radiation emitted by the thing over time. Not to mention any radiation given off the plates is not even going to be able to penetrate your skin or clothes; whereas the banana is already inside you.
Are you saying not to eat bananas?
just don’t eat the uranium plates. or do. whatever. I’m just text on a page.
Bananas genuinely are more radioactive than most other foods due to their high potassium content and the relatively high frequency of radioactive isotopes of potassium.
Babe, put out the fine Xbox tableware
Personally, I think I would save these for Halloween or a kid’s birthday party. They’re cool and I kinda want some but I also feel like they’re not conducive to keeping the food down.
You can find it pretty easy in antique stores if you really want some.
As long as it isn’t uranium glazed glass it is safe to eat from. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1322875/
From the paper: "The maximum quantity of uranium leached from the uranium-bearing glasses was about 30 micrograms L-1, while that from the ceramic-glazed items was about 300,000 micrograms L-1. "
Thanks for posting this!!
Also, the green glow isn’t from radioactive decay, it’s the uranium fluorescing under the UV light stationed just out of frame.
Yeah the light is probably more harmful than the glassware lol
Most of the produce you buy in grocery stores have been irradiated with UV to kill harmful bacteria, and it does not have any harmful effects. I suppose if they leave the UV light on and eat dinner under it for an extended period of time then they might get a sunburn.
I suppose if they leave the UV light on and eat dinner under it for an extended period of time then they might get a sunburn.
Yeah that’s what I meant
I wonder if it truly doesn’t have any harmful effects?
I’ve heard a lot of studies about how America’s *gut Flora has changed in the last 50 years. How much of that is from having fewer microbiota ingested from natural food?
I mean, it’s not like UV only kills the bad stuff right?
As far as I know changes in the microbiota are mostly due to the lack of dietary fiber and the consumption of highly processed foods
Probably combined with high use of antibiotics.
America’s got Flora
It took me way too long to figure out that you meant America’s gut flora. America’s Got Flora sounds like some weird reality TV show.
I’d watch that.
Thank you very much. I made the edit
And then look at how many lives it saved by providing food this way.
If you don’t reach critical mass, did you even feast?
Looks like a black light overhead causing everything fluorescent to glow.
Edit: Not even just looks like. That’s exactly what it is.
Well yeah; to see the glowing effect of Uranium glass, you need to put it under a UV light.
“Oh hey! Neat plates!”
See the group name
“The cancer is coming from INSIDE the building”
deleted by creator
I’ve heard that you want to not use acidic food on some, since it will dissolve some of the plate into the food.
That’s only really for glassware with a uranium glaze. The uranium inside the glass is stable and sealed away enough that mild food acids won’t affect it. The biggest concerns are for chips or cracks in the glass, the uranium can still leech into food that way.
The real problem - don’t look at the UV light shining on this! You are much more likely to get eye damage from the light than you are to experience any illness from the radiation.
Oh wow, thanks for the info
I watched a video on how to make uranium glass because I have a three-shelf collection of it myself and I was curious and they use a very small amount of uranium powder per piece of glass.
I would never suggest that you eat uranium in any quantity, but the likelihood a couple of atoms of uranium leaching into the entire meal split between the whole family is insanely small, and the amount of damage a single atom of uranium can do is also insanely small.
That being said, I like them for their decorative purposes and not for use as glassware, so take that with a dose of uranium salt.
My husband is a collector. If only our collection was limited to three shelves, haha.
But yeah, we don’t use ours too eat off of either, although we could. I’ll take the grain of salt, because ironically, we have a set of uranium glass salt shakers that are the only pieces we use semi-frequently.