Can smells kill?

MERCAPTAN is the ingrediant added to natural gas so that it has an odor.

What is Mercaptan?
Natural gas in its native state is colorless and odorless. Mercaptan is the additive that is added to natural gas to make it easier to detect in case of a leak. The most important thing to know about mercaptan is that it stinks. Some people compare it to the smell of rotten eggs.

In a concentrated form, its smell is almost unbearable. And it takes only a few parts per million of mercaptan to give natural gas a smell. That is precisely why we add it to natural gas. If we did not add mercaptan, it would be hard for you to know that unlit natural gas was coming from your stove after you left the valve turned on. And leaks from furnaces and hot water heaters would be nearly impossible to detect without expensive equipment. So mercaptan’s smell is a very valuable safety feature.

Mercaptans contain sulfur. That’s what makes them smell. The kind we use blends well with natural gas and, in a gaseous state, has much the same properties as natural gas, so it will also rise and dissipate with natural gas.

There are other uses for mercaptans in industry, including jet fuel, pharmaceuticals and livestock feed additives. They are used in many chemical plants. Mercaptans are less corrosive and less toxic than similar sulfur compounds found naturally in rotten eggs, onions, garlic, skunks, and, of course, bad breath. In other word, forms of mercaptan can be found in things that smell.

ltfire, when you copy and paste a chunk of text of that size, you should indicate that you’ve done so (by putting it in quotation marks, for example) instead of making it look like your own writing.

In fact, lemme know where you got it from, so I can check it for fair use. Thanks.

I heard a looooong time ago that there was a tree that could kill a monkey in eight minutes simply by its smell? It’s probably crazy, but just interesting. Maybe I’ll look into it.

ltfire’s quote is from: Columbia Gas of Virginia - What is mercaptan?

Sorry for the booboo. I wrote MERCAPTAN in Google, and that was the first item listed. Had some ads attached to it so I thought I’d neaten it up. Did I break a copyright law or something???

A good friend of mine has anaphylaxis to poultry and the smell of it alone is enough to set off some of her symptoms.

I’ve never been sure how much of this is due to her actually breathing in some of whatever it is that’s causing the smell, and how much is psychosomatic. But it definitely happens.