Their uses range from
detecting dangerous contaminants, like oil spills, to retrieving evidence of climate change.
Not exact matches
A Globe investigation this summer called into question the department's ability to
detect potentially
dangerous contaminants, and revealed that Health Canada standards at the time did not require testing for myclobutanil and other banned chemicals.
Researchers at the European Union Reference Laboratory for alternatives to animal testing developed five different tests that use human blood cells to
detect contaminants in drugs that cause a potentially
dangerous fever response.