Dictionary Definition
asbestos n : a fibrous amphibole; used for making
fireproof articles; inhaling fibers can cause asbestosis or lung
cancer
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From ἄσβεστος from ἀ- + σβέννυμι.Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈæs.bɛs.tɒs/ /"
Extensive Definition
Asbestos is a group of
minerals with long, thin
fibrous crystals. The
word "asbestos" is derived from a Greek
adjective meaning inextinguishable. The Greeks
termed asbestos the "miracle mineral" because of its soft and
pliant properties, as well as its ability to withstand
heat.
Asbestos became increasingly
popular among manufacturers and builders in the late 19th century
due to its resistance to heat, electricity and chemical damage, its
sound absorption and tensile strength. When asbestos is used for
its resistance to fire or heat, the fibers are often mixed with
cement or woven into
fabric or mats. Asbestos is used in brake shoes and gaskets for its heat resistance,
and in the past was used on electric oven and hotplate wiring for
its electrical
insulation at elevated temperature, and in buildings for its
flame-retardant
and insulating properties, tensile
strength, flexibility, and resistance to
chemicals.
Unfortunately, this "miracle
material" is now known to be highly toxic. The inhalation of asbestos
fibers can cause serious illnesses, including mesothelioma and asbestosis. Since the mid
1980s, many uses of asbestos have been banned in many
countries.
Types and associated fibres
Six minerals are defined as
"asbestos" including: chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite, tremolite, anthophyllite and actinolite.
White
Chrysotile, CAS No. 12001-29-5, is obtained from serpentine rocks which are common throughout the world. Chrysotile fibers are curly as opposed to fibers from amosite, crocidolite, tremolite, actinolite, and anthophyllite which are needlelike. Chrysotile, along with other types of asbestos, has been banned in dozens of countries and is only allowed in the United States and Europe in very limited circumstances. Chrysotile has been used more than any other type and accounts for about 95% of the asbestos found in buildings in America. Applications where chrysotile might be used include the use of joint compound. It is more flexible than amphibole types of asbestos; it can be spun and woven into fabric. The most common use is within corrugated asbestos cement roof sheets typically used for outbuildings, warehouses and garages. It is also found as flat sheets used for ceilings and sometimes for walls. Numerous other items have been made containing chrysotile including brake linings, cloth behind fuses (for fire protection), pipe insulation, in floor tiles and in rope seals to boilers.Mg3[Si2O5](OH)4
Brown
Amosite, CAS No. 12172-73-5, is a trade name for the amphiboles belonging to the Cummingtonite - Grunerite solid solution series, commonly from Africa, named as an acronym from Asbestos Mines of South Africa. One formula given for amosite is Fe7Si8O22(OH)2. It is found most frequently as a fire retardant in thermal insulation products and ceiling tiles.Other materials
Other regulated asbestos minerals, such as tremolite asbestos, CAS No. 77536-68-6, Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2; actinolite asbestos (or smaragdite), CAS No. 77536-66-4, Ca2(Mg, Fe)5(Si8O22)(OH)2; and anthophyllite asbestos, CAS No. 77536-67-5, (Mg, Fe)7Si8O22(OH)2; are less commonly used industrially but can still be found in a variety of construction materials and insulation materials and have been reported in the past to occur in a few consumer products.Other natural and not
currently regulated asbestiform minerals, such as richterite,
Na(CaNa)(Mg, Fe++)5(Si8O22)(OH)2, and winchite, (CaNa)Mg4(Al,
Fe3+)(Si8O22)(OH)2, may be found as a contaminant in products such
as the vermiculite
containing zonolite
insulation manufactured by W.R.
Grace and Company. These minerals are thought to be no less
harmful than tremolite, amosite, or crocidolite, but since they are
not regulated, they are referred to as "asbestiform" rather than
asbestos although may still be related to diseases and
hazardous.
Production trends
In 2005, 2.2 million tons of asbestos were mined worldwide. Russia was the largest producer with about 40% world share followed by China and Kazakhstan.Uses
Historic usage
Asbestos was named by the ancient Greeks who also recognized certain hazards of the material. The Greek geographer Strabo and the Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder noted that the material damaged lungs of slaves who wove it into cloth. Charlemagne, the first Holy Roman Emperor, is said to have had a tablecloth made of asbestos.Wealthy Persians,
who bought asbestos imported over the Hindu Kush,
amazed guests by cleaning the cloth by simply exposing it to fire.
According to Biruni in
his book of Gems, any cloths made of asbestos (, āzarshast or ,
āzarshab) were called () shastakeh. Some of the Persians believed
the fiber was fur from an animal (named
samandar, ) that lived in fire and died when exposed to
water.
Some archeologists believe
that ancients made shrouds of asbestos, wherein they burned the
bodies of their kings, in order to preserve only their ashes, and
prevent their being mixed with those of wood or other combustible
materials commonly used in funeral pyres. Others assert that the
ancients used asbestos to make perpetual wicks for sepulchral or
other lamps. By the mid 20th century uses included fire retardant
coatings, concrete, bricks, pipes and fireplace cement, heat, fire,
and acid resistant gaskets, pipe insulation, ceiling insulation,
fireproof drywall, flooring, roofing, lawn furniture, and drywall
joint compound. Thousands of metric tons of asbestos were used in
World
War II ships to wrap the pipes, line the boilers, and cover
engine and turbine parts. There were approximately 4.3 million
shipyard workers in the United States during WWII; for every
thousand workers about 14 died of mesothelioma and an unknown
number died from asbestosis.
The first documented death
related to asbestos was in 1906. By the 1930s, England regulated
ventilation and made asbestosis an excusable work related disease,
about ten years sooner than the U.S. The term Mesothelioma
was not used in medical literature until 1931, and was not
associated with asbestos until sometime in the 1940s.
Specific products
Serpentine group
Serpentine minerals have a
sheet or layered structure. Chrysolite is the only asbestos mineral
in the serpentine group. In the United
States, chrysotile has been the most commonly used type of
asbestos. According to the U.S. EPA Asbestos Building Inspectors
Manual, chrysotile accounts for approximately 95% of asbestos found
in buildings in the United States. Chrysotile is often present in a
wide variety of materials, including:
- joint compound
- mud and texture coats
- vinyl floor tiles, sheeting, adhesives
- roofing tars, felts, siding, and shingles
- "transite" panels, siding, countertops, and pipes
- fireproofing
- caulk
- gaskets
- brake pads and shoes
- clutch plates
- stage curtains
- fire blankets
- interior fire doors
- fireproof clothing for firefighters
- thermal pipe insulation
In the European
Union and Australia it has
recently been banned as a potential health hazard and is not used
at all. Japan
is moving in the same direction, but more slowly. Revelations that
hundreds of workers had died in Japan over the previous few decades
from diseases related to asbestos sparked a scandal in mid-2005.
Tokyo had, in 1971, ordered companies handling asbestos to install
ventilators and check health on a regular basis; however, the
Japanese government did not ban crocidolite and amosite until 1995,
and a full-fledged ban on asbestos was implemented in October 2004.
Fibers ultimately form because when these minerals originally
cooled and crystallized, they formed by the polymeric molecules lining up
parallel with each other and forming oriented crystal
lattices. These crystals thus have three cleavage
planes, just as other minerals and gemstones have. But in their
case, there are two cleavage planes that are much weaker than the
third direction. When sufficient force is applied, they tend to
break along their weakest directions, resulting in a linear
fragmentation pattern and hence a fibrous form. This fracture
process can keep occurring and one larger asbestos fiber can
ultimately become the source of hundreds of much thinner and
smaller fibers.
As asbestos fibers get smaller
and lighter, they more easily become airborne and human respiratory
exposures can result. Fibers will eventually settle but may be
re-suspended by air currents or other movement.
Friability of a product
containing asbestos means that it is so soft and weak in structure
that it can be broken with simple finger crushing pressure. Friable
materials are of the most initial concern due to their ease of
damage. The forces or conditions of usage that come into intimate
contact with most non-friable materials containing asbestos are
substantially higher than finger pressure.
Environmental asbestos
Asbestos can be found naturally in the air outdoors and in some drinkable water, including water from natural sources. Studies have shown that members of general (non-occupationally exposed) population have tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of asbestos fibers in each gram of dry lung tissue, which translates into millions of fibers and tens of thousands of asbestos bodies in every person's lungs.Asbestos from natural geologic
deposits is known as "Naturally Occurring Asbestos" (NOA). Health
risks associated with exposure to NOA are not yet fully understood,
and current US federal regulations do not address exposure from
NOA. Many populated areas are in proximity to shallow, natural
deposits which occur in 50 of 58 California counties and in 19
other U.S. states. In one study, data was collected from 3,000
mesothelioma
patients in California and
890 men with prostate
cancer, a malignancy not known to be related to asbestos. The
study found a correlation between the incidence of mesotheliomas
and the distance a patient lived from known deposits of rock likely
to include asbestos, the correlation was not present when the
incidence of prostate cancer was compared with the same distances.
According to the study, risk of mesothelioma declined by 6 percent
for every 10 kilometers that an individual had lived from a likely
asbestos source.
Portions of
El Dorado County, California are known to contain natural
asbestos formations near the surface.
Large portions of Fairfax
County, Virginia were also found to be underlain with tremolite. The county
monitored air quality at construction sites, controlled soil taken
from affected areas, and required freshly developed sites to lay of
clean, stable material over the ground..
Early concern in the modern
era on the health effects of asbestos exposure can be found in
several sources. Among the earliest were reports in Britain. The
annual reports of the Chief Inspector of Factories reported as
early as 1898 that asbestos had 'easily demonstrated' health
risks
At about the same time, what
was probably the first study of mortality among asbestos workers
was reported in France . While the study describes the cause of
death as chalicosis,
a generalized pneumoconiosis, the
circumstances of the employment of the fifty workers whose death
prompted the study suggest that the root cause was asbestos or
mixed asbestos-cotton dust exposure.
1900s - 1910s
Further awareness of
asbestos-related diseases can be found in the early 1900s, when
London doctor H. Montague Murray conducted a post mortem exam on a
young asbestos factory worker who died in 1899. Dr. Murray gave
testimony on this death in connection with an industrial disease
compensation hearing. The post-mortem confirmed the presence of
asbestos in the lung tissue, prompting Dr. Murray to express as an
expert opinion his belief that the inhalation of asbestos dust had
at least contributed to, if not actually caused, the death of the
worker.
The record in the United
States was similar. Early observations were largely anecdotal in
nature and did not definitively link the occupation with the
disease, followed by more compelling and larger studies that
strengthened the association. One such study, published in 1918,
noted:
- All of these processes unquestionably involve a considerable dust hazard, but the hygienic aspects of the industry have not been reported upon. It may be said, in conclusion, that in the practice of American and Canadian life insurance companies asbestos workers are generally declined on account of the assumed health-injurious conditions of the industry .
1920s and 1930s
Widespread recognition of the
occupational risks of asbestos in Britain was reported in 1924 by a
Dr. Cooke, a pathologist, who introduced a case description of a
33-year old female asbestos worker with the following: 'Medical men
in areas where asbestos is manufactured have long suspected the
dust to be the cause of chronic bronchitis and fibrosis...." Dr.
Cooke then went on to report on a case in 1927 involving a 33-year
old male worker who was the only survivor out of ten workers in an
asbestos carding room. In the report he named the disease
"asbestosis."
Dr. Cooke's second case report
was followed, in the late 1920s, by a large public health
investigation (now known as the Merewether report after one of its
two authors) that examined some 360 asbestos-textile workers
(reported to be about 15% of the total comparable employment in
Britain at the time) and found that about a quarter of them
suffered from pulmonary fibrosis . This investigation resulted in
improved regulation of the manufacturing of asbestos-containing
products in the early 1930s. Regulations included industrial
hygiene standards, medical examinations, and inclusion of the
asbestos industry into the British Workers' Compensation Act
.
The first known US workers'
compensation claim for asbestos disease was in 1927. In 1930, the
first reported autopsy of an asbestosis sufferer was conducted in
the United states and later presented by a doctor at the Mayo
Clinic, although in this case the exposure involved mining
activities somewhere in South America.
In 1930, the major asbestos
company Johns-Manville produced a report, for internal company use
only, about medical reports of asbestos worker fatalities. In 1933,
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. doctors found that 29% of workers
in a Johns-Manville plant had asbestosis. Either in 1942 or 1943,
the president of Johns-Manville, Lewis H.
Brown, said that the managers of another asbestos company were
"a bunch of fools for notifying employees who had asbestosis." When
one of the managers asked, "do you mean to tell me you would let
them work until they dropped dead?" the response is reported to
have been, "Yes. We save a lot of money that way." In 1944, a
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company report found 42 cases of
asbestosis among 195 asbestos miners. In 1952, Dr. Kenneth Smith,
Johns-Manville medical director, recommended (unsuccessfully) that
warning labels be attached to products containing asbestos. Later,
Smith testified: "It was a business decision as far as I could
understand . . . the corporation is in business to provide jobs for
people and make money for stockholders and they had to take into
consideration the effects of everything they did and if the
application of a caution label identifying a product as hazardous
would cut into sales, there would be serious financial
implications." In 1953, National Gypsum's safety director wrote to
the Indiana Division of Industrial Hygiene, recommending that
acoustic plaster mixers wear respirators "because of the asbestos
used in the product." Another company official noted that the
letter is "full of dynamite" and urged that it be retrieved before
reaching its destination. A memo in the files noted that the
company "succeeded in stopping" the letter, which "will be
modified."
1960s-early 80s
Modern regulation
- See main article at Asbestos and the law
United States
In 1989 the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued the Asbestos Ban and Phase Out Rule which was subsequently overturned in the case of Corrosion Proof Fittings v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1991. This ruling leaves many consumer products that can still legally contain trace amounts of asbestos. For a clarification of products which legally contain asbestos read the EPA's clarification statement.The EPA has proposed a
concentration limit of 7 million fibers per liter of drinking water
for long fibers (lengths greater than or equal to 5 µm). The
OSHA, (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) has set
limits of 100,000 fibers with lengths greater than or equal to 5 µm
per cubic meter of workplace air for 8-hour shifts and 40-hour work
weeks.
New Zealand
In 1984 The import of raw amphibole (blue and brown) asbestos into New Zealand was banned. In 2002 the import of chrysotile (white) asbestos was banned.Contamination of other products
Asbestos and vermiculite
Vermiculite is
a hydrated laminar magnesium-aluminum-iron silicate which resembles
mica. It can be used for many industrial applications and has been
used as a replacement for asbestos. Some ore bodies of vermiculite
have been found to contain small amounts of asbestos. One
vermiculite mine operated by
W. R. Grace and Company in Libby,
Montana exposed workers and community residents to danger by
mining contaminated vermiculite, in 1999 the EPA began cleanup
efforts and now the area is a superfund cleanup area. The
EPA has determined that harmful asbestos is released from the mine
as well as through other activities that disturb soil in the
area.
Asbestos and talc
Talc is sometimes contaminated with asbestos. In 2000, tests in a certified asbestos-testing laboratory found the tremolite form of amphibole asbestos in three out of eight major brands of children's crayons (oil pastels) that are made partly from talc — Crayola, Prang, and Rose Art. In Crayola crayons, the tests found asbestos levels from 0.05% in Carnation Pink to 2.86% in Orchid; in Prang crayons, the range was from 0.3% in Periwinkle to 0.54% in Yellow; in Rose Art crayons, it was from 0.03% in Brown to 1.20% in Orange. Overall, 32 different types of crayons from these brands contained more than trace amounts of asbestos, and eight others contained trace amounts. The Art and Creative Materials Institute, a trade association which tests the safety of crayons on behalf of the makers, initially insisted the test results must be incorrect, although they later said they do not test for asbestos. The mining company, R T Vanderbilt Co of Gouverneur, New York, which supplied the talc to the crayon makers, insists there is no asbestos in its talc "to the best of our knowledge and belief", but tests by the United States Mine Safety and Health Administration found asbestos in all four talc samples that it tested in 2000., and at least one defendant reported claim counts in excess of 800,000 in 2006.Current trends indicate that
the worldwide rate at which people are diagnosed with the disease
will likely increase through the next decade. Analysts have
estimated that the total costs of asbestos litigation in the USA
alone is over $250 billion.
The Federal legal system in
the United States has been faced with numerous counts of asbestos
related suits, which often included multiple plaintiffs with
similar symptoms. The concern with these court cases are the
staggering numbers, which in 1999 recorded a whopping 200,000 cases
pending in the Federal court system of the United
States . Further, it is estimated that within the next 40
years, cases may balloon to seven hundred thousand cases. These
numbers help explain how there are thousands of current pending
cases.
Litigation of asbestos
materials has been a difficult entity to muster due to the multiple
factors which play a role in every case. The company that often is
being exposed for their negligence of working conditions and the
worker or in many cases, workers who were exposed to asbestos and
did not know that they were, or knew and now fear future medical
problems, have current symptoms or were upset for the negligence of
the company. Companies sometimes counter saying that health issues
do not currently appear in their worker or workers, or sometimes
are settled out of court. The Research and Development (RAND)
think-tank has appropriated certain legal information which is
readily available for proclaimed victims of natural resource
accidents. This information, although sometimes deemed radical, has
helped many workers, regardless of health condition, earn
compensation through companies. RAND, along with the
Institute for Civil Justice (ICJ) have been proponents of the
organization of past cases in order to determine one aspect of fair
compensation for workers. 1999 saw the introduction of the Fairness
in Asbestos Compensation Act. This Act was used as a tool in order
to determine which of the numerous federal cases were true, and if
the plaintiff’s were actually suffering from asbestos related
illness. This process was necessary as thousands of false insurance
claims were costing companies billions and ultimately many
companies were forced to file for bankruptcy. While companies filed
for bankruptcy, this limited payouts to those who were actually
affected by the material. What the 1999 Act ultimately determined
was “a judgment that those resources should be spent on delivering
full and prompt compensation to those who are, and will become,
impaired by asbestos disease, and not dissipated on payments to
those who are not sick and may never become sick, on punitive
damages that seek retribution for the decisions of long-dead
executives for conduct that took place decades ago and on the
extraordinary transaction costs (Professor Christopher Edley,
Jr.).” . The amounts and method of allocating compensation have
been the source of many court cases, and government attempts at
resolution of existing and future cases.
One notable asbestos lawyer,
Peter
Angelos, used the vast fortune he gained from asbestos lawsuits
to buy the Baltimore
Orioles.
Critics of safety regulations
According to Natural Resources Canada, chrysotile asbestos is not as dangerous as once thought. According to their fact sheet, "...current knowledge and modern technology can successfully control the potential for health and environmental harm posed by chrysotile". In May of 1998, Canada requested consultations with the European Commission concerning France's 1996 prohibition of the importation and sale of asbestos.The EC said that substitute
materials had been developed in place of asbestos, which are safer
to human health. It stressed that the French measures were not
discriminatory, and were fully justified for public health reasons.
The EC said that in the July consultations, it had tried to
convince Canada that the measures were justified, and that just as
Canada broke off consultations, it was in the process of submitting
substantial scientific data in favour of the asbestos
ban.
Asbestos regulation critics
include Junkscience.com author and Fox News
columnist Steven
Milloy and the asbestos industry. Critics sometimes argue that
increased regulation does more harm than good and that replacements
to asbestos are inferior. An example is the suggestion by Dixy Lee
Ray and others that the shuttle
Challenger exploded because the maker of O-ring putty was
pressured by the EPA into ceasing production of asbestos-laden
putty. However, scientists point out that the putty used in
Challengers final flight did contain asbestos, and failures in the
putty were not responsible for the failure of the O-ring that led
to loss of the shuttle. Steven
Milloy suggests that the World
Trade Center towers could still be standing or at least would
have stood longer had a 1971 ban not stopped the completion of the
asbestos coating above the 64th floor . This was not mentioned in
the
National Institute of Standards and Technology's report on the
towers' collapse. Insulation that replaced asbestos is believed to
have equivalent fire resistance, and any sort of sprayed-on
insulation, including asbestos-based material, would have been
removed in large areas by the impact of the planes.
Substitutes for asbestos in construction
Fiberglass insulation was invented in 1938 and is now the most commonly used type of insulation material. In Europe stone- and glasswool are the main insulators in houses.Many companies that produced
asbestos-cement products that were reinforced with asbestos fibres
have developed products incorporating organic fibres. One such
product was known as Eternit and another
"Everite" now use "Nutec" fibres which consist of organic fibres,
portland
cement and silica.
Stonefibres are used in gaskets and friction
materials.
Another potential fiber is
Polybenzimidazole
or PBI fiber. Polybenzimidazole
fiber is a synthetic
fiber with high melting
point of 760 °C that also does not ignite. Due to its
exceptional thermal and chemical stability, it is often used by
fire
departments and space
agencies.
Recycling and disposal
In most developed countries, asbestos is typically disposed of as hazardous waste in landfill sites.Asbestos can also be recycled
by transforming it into harmless silicate
glass. A process of thermal decomposition at
1000-1250 °C produces a mixture of non-hazardous silicate phases, and at
temperatures above 1250 °C it produces silicate glass.
Microwave thermal treatment can be used in an industrial
manufacturing process to transform asbestos and asbestos-containing
waste into porcelain stoneware tiles, porous single-fired wall
tiles, and ceramic bricks.
Other internal links
- Adequately wet
- Adswood tip (in Greater Manchester in England)
- Ambler, Pennsylvania
- Asbestos and the law
- Asbestos fibers
- Asbestos-Ceramic
- Asbestosis
- Asbestos, Quebec
- Avondale Landfill (in Polmont in Scotland)
- Brominated flame-retardant
- Eternit
- Fibro
- Fireproofing
- Wittenoom, former asbestos mining town
- Medical geology
- Mesothelioma
References
Additional reading
- George B. Guthrie and Brooke T. Mossman, editors, Health Effects of Mineral Dusts, Mineralogical Society of America Reviews in Mineralogy v. 28, 584 pages (1993) ISBN 0-939950-33-2
External links
Regulatory and government links
- U.S. EPA Asbestos Home Page
- ATSDR Case Studies in Environmental Medicine: Asbestos Toxicity
- Directory of Accredited Laboratories - Asbestos Fiber Analysis (TEM Test Method)
- Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding asbestos
- Health History Source: Article by the SafetyLine Institute - WorkSafe - Western Australian state government
- Asbestos and Occupational Health in the World
- British Government Health and Safety Executive (HSE)
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health - Asbestos Page
- Control of Asbestos in Singapore
Mineral and mining links
- Parachrysotile (asbestos) at the webmineral.com Mineral Database
- Univ. of Minn.: Asbestos
- Asbestos Newspaper Articles Archive
- Asbestos in the World
- White Gold Pioneers: Asbestos Mining—The origins of asbestos mining, illustrated with many early photographs
Health and the environment
- About Your House — General Series — Asbestos
- Hazards magazine's comprehensive asbestos resource pages
- The Miracle Mineral Fiber - Asbestos
- CBC Digital Archives - Asbestos: Magic mineral or deadly dust?
- An article on the health impact of asbestos from Liverpool's 'Nerve' magazine
- The Wittenoom Tragedy, Asbestos Diseases Society of Australia.
- Health and Safety - Asbestosis (TUC Resources, UK)
- International Asbestos Victims Memorial
- About Asbestos European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (OSHA)
- Asbestos contamination near abandoned mine
- Asbestos Health Risk Assessment
- Asbestos Removal Procedures
- A USGS map of "Naturally Occurring Asbestos" in Eastern America
- Shipbuilding's Deadly Legacy(series of articles from a Newspaper local to Hampton Roads, VA)
- EPA refused to warn of asbestos dangers
- Asbestos Danger: Do You Have Zonolite In Your Attic?
- A guide to asbestos in the home (From The Wrekin Housing Trust)
asbestos in Arabic:
أسبستوس
asbestos in Bulgarian:
Азбест
asbestos in Catalan:
Asbest
asbestos in Czech:
Azbest
asbestos in Danish:
Asbest
asbestos in German:
Asbest
asbestos in Estonian:
Asbest
asbestos in Modern Greek
(1453-): Αμίαντος
asbestos in Spanish:
Asbesto
asbestos in Esperanto:
Asbesto
asbestos in Persian:
آزبست
asbestos in French:
Amiante
asbestos in Galician:
Amianto
asbestos in Korean:
석면
asbestos in Indonesian:
Asbestos
asbestos in Italian:
Amianto
asbestos in Hebrew:
אזבסט
asbestos in Lithuanian:
Asbestas
asbestos in Hungarian:
Azbeszt
asbestos in Mongolian:
Асбест
asbestos in Dutch:
Asbest
asbestos in Japanese:
石綿
asbestos in Norwegian:
Asbest
asbestos in Norwegian
Nynorsk: Asbest
asbestos in Polish:
Azbest
asbestos in Portuguese:
Asbesto
asbestos in Romanian:
Azbest
asbestos in Russian: Асбест
(материал)
asbestos in Simple English:
Asbestos
asbestos in Slovak:
Azbest
asbestos in Serbian:
Азбест
asbestos in Finnish:
Asbesti
asbestos in Swedish:
Asbest
asbestos in Telugu:
రాతినార
asbestos in Turkish:
Asbest
asbestos in Ukrainian:
Азбест
asbestos in Chinese:
石棉
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
act drop, amianthus, asbestos board,
asbestos curtain, backdrop, batten, border, cloth, coulisse, counterweight, curtain, curtain board, cyclorama, decor, drop, drop curtain, earth flax,
fire break, fire curtain, fire line, fire resistance, fire
retardant, fire wall, fireproofing, flat, flipper, hanging, mountain flax, rag, scene, scenery, screen, side scene, stage screw,
tab, tableau, teaser, tormentor, transformation,
transformation scene, wing,
wingcut, woodcut