Toxaphene Kills Grasshoppers: The Camera Shows it's as Simple as A.B.C.
- 1949
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Small JPG1200 x 928px — 209 KBLarge JPG2880 x 2226px — 1.9 MBFull-sized JPG5914 x 4571px — 7.6 MBOriginal fileTIFF — 5914 x 4571px — 77.4 MBPamphlet in the form of a children's alphabet book depicts the stages of death inflicted upon a grasshopper with the use of Toxaphene pesticides produced by Hercules Powder Company.
Originally trademarked by the Hercules Powder Company, Toxaphene was a synthetic organic insecticide toxicant primarily used in agricultural insecticides.
Formed in 1912 as part of an anti-trust settlement with DuPont, the Hercules Powder Company (later Hercules Inc.) initially specialized in the manufacture of explosives and smokeless powders and subsequently diversified its business to encompass a variety of industrial products, including pine and paper chemicals, synthetics, pigments, polymers, and cellulose.
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Hercules Powder Company. “Toxaphene Kills Grasshoppers: The Camera Shows It's as Simple as A.B.C.” Wilmington, Delaware, 1949. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/j6731502v.
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