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Claim: Pet owners face yet another hazard: radioactive kitty litter.
Origins: A one-line comment tossed in at the end of an NBC Nightly News segment left pet owners gravely concerned about a potential health threat to themselves and their pets. George Lewis'
And a footnote tonight from a Web site devoted to rumors on the Internet. Among some others that have
been debunked, coloring your CDs with a magic marker will make them sound better, and bubble wrap
contains toxic gases. One totally true rumor, however: Scientists discovered some brands of kitty litter are radioactive.
The entry (with the "T" standing for "true") read:
T. Radioactive cat litter found in May 1991 in Berkeley, Calif.
Right beneath it was the clue ("U" stand for "unproven") that should have twigged NBC that this entry had to do with one cat's used kitty litter:
U. Source of the litter was radioactive cat food? Cat on radiation therapy?
The story coming out of Berkeley in 1991 didn't involve fresh bags of radioactive cat litter sold to unsuspecting pet owners; it had to do with the furor raised by one cat's used litter turning up in a garbage dump.
Berkeley police are looking for a feline who apparently ingested a dose of
Further reports suggest that another drugged cat's eliminations caused similar consternation in New Mexico in 1994:
After a garbage truck destined for a local dump in Los Alamos County, NM, set off radiation alarms, "officials leapt into action." The Fire Department sealed off the dump, the truck was driven to an isolation building and a hazardous-material unit from Los Alamos national nuclear lab arrived to investigate. The source of the "harmlessly low" radioactivity: kitty litter. The cat in question had undergone cancer treatments using radioactive
How NBC turned "Radioactive cat litter found in May 1991 in Berkeley, Calif." into "Scientists discovered some brands of kitty litter are radioactive" is a prime example of how misinformation can slip through even the tightest of nets. It but takes a simple misreading or misremembering of a story to turn a fact from it into a scary rumor on the rampage, and even the most trusted news sources will at times slip in this fashion.
Pet owners, take heart — concerns over glow-in-the-dark kitties are misplaced. Barbara "cat on a hot singed truth" Mikkelson Last updated: 23 June 2007 Urban Legends Reference Pages © 1995-2009 by snopes.com. This material may not be reproduced without permission. snopes and the snopes.com logo are registered service marks of snopes.com. Sources:
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And a footnote tonight from a Web site devoted to rumors on the Internet. Among some others that have
been debunked, coloring your CDs with a magic marker will make them sound better, and bubble wrap
contains toxic gases. One totally true rumor, however: Scientists discovered some brands of kitty litter are radioactive.
Sources: