Workplace exposureConcentrated aerosols from substances such as silica, asbestos, and diesel particulate matter are sometimes found in the workplace and have been shown to result in a number of diseases including silicosis and black lung.[1] Respirators can protect workers from harmful aerosol exposure. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health certifies respirators through the National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory to ensure that they protect workers and the public from harmful airborne contaminants.[2] Effect on climateAnthropogenic aerosols, particularly sulfate aerosols from fossil fuel combustion, exert a cooling influence on the climate.[3] The cooling effect of aerosols, however, does not seem to directly counteract the warming induced by greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and water vapor and is accounted for in climate models, despite some claims that "global dimming" by aerosols may counteract global warming.[4] Recent studies of the Sahel drought[5] and major increases since 1967 in rainfall over the Northern Territory, Kimberley, Pilbara and around the Nullarbor Plain have led some scientists to conclude that the aerosol haze over South and East Asia has been steadily shifting tropical rainfall in both hemispheres southward[6]. The latest studies of severe rainfall declines over southern Australia since 1997[7] have led climatologists there to consider the possibility that these Asian aerosols have shifted not only tropical but also midlatitude systems southward. References
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