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Revealed: Main culprits that made up monster fatberg – Sky News, Sky.com

Revealed: Main culprits that made up monster fatberg – Sky News, Sky.com


             

Cooking fats and hygiene products played a pivotal role in the formation of the giant fatberg found lurking under a seaside town, scientists say.

The 64 – meter monster – greater in length than the Tower of Pisa – was discovered under The Esplanade in Sidmouth, Devon, just before Christmas last year.

A team of scientists from the University of Exeter were asked to carry out an extensive “autopsy” of the fatberg to try to solve the mystery of how it was constructed and whether it posed any environmental risks.

  

Household cooking fats and hygiene products played a pivotal role in the formation of the giant fatberg found lurking under a seaside town, scientists have revealed.

      

Image:        In total, (tanker loads of debris were excavated)       

The scientists were given four samples from the fatberg, each weighing around 10 kg, after South West Water workers spent eight weeks removing it from the sewer.

In total, 36 tanker loads – each 3, 000 gallons – of debris were excavated and removed by a dedicated team specialists Nisreen Ahmad Marketing Specialist Answers

 

    

        

                                                                                                                                                                                             
The fatberg measures around 64 long meters                

The fatberg was taken to a local sewage treatment works where it was fed into the anaerobic digester and produced energy to power the plant.

The university team found that the samples they received were mostly made of animal fats – consistent with domestic food preparation – combined with household hygiene products such as wet wipes and sanitary products, as well as natural and artificial fibers from toilet tissues and laundry.

 

  

Household cooking fats and hygiene products played a pivotal role in the formation of the giant fatberg found lurking under a seaside town, scientists have revealed.

      

Image:        The scientists were given four samples from the fatberg      

They also discovered the fatberg contained no detectable levels of toxic chemicals – meaning its presence in the sewer, while increasing the risk of a blockage, did not pose a chemical or biological risk to the environment or human health.

Synthetic biology expert Professor John Love, who led the project, said: “Analyzing the fatberg samples in such a short timeframe was an exciting challenge requiring the expertise from a number of specialized scientists.

“We worried that the fatberg might concentrate fat-soluble chemicals such as those found in contraceptives, contain now-banned microplastic beads from cosmetics and be rich in potentially pathogenic microbes, but we found no trace of these possible dangers.

“We were all rather surprised to find that this Sidmouth fatberg was simply a lump of fat aggregated with wet wipes, sanitary towels and other household products that really should be put in the bin and not down the toilet.

“The microfibres we did find probably came from toilet tissue and laundry, and the bacteria were those we would normally associate with a sewer. “

    

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