Radon Testing
Radon is a radioactive gaseous element produced in the disintegration of
radium, a radioactive metallic element. It cannot be detected by the senses and can be confirmed only by sophisticated instruments
and laboratory tests. The gas enters a house through pores and cracks in the concrete or through floorboards of poorly ventilated
crawlspaces, especially when wet ground allows the gas to escape easily through the soil and disperse in the atmosphere. Radon
is a lung carcinogen: the National Academy of Sciences estimates radon causes some 15,000 to 22,000 lung cancer deaths annually.
The U.S. Surgeon General and the EPA recommend all houses be tested for radon. Houses with high radon levels can be fixed.
Excerpts from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Indoor Radon”.