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Dangerous White Foam Rains Down In Tianjin Following Explosion

A mysterious white foam has been seen raining down on the streets of Tianjin, China following the explosions a few days ago

Rainfall containing a mysterious ‘white foam’ is falling in Tianjin and it’s causing burning and stinging sensations as it comes into contact with people’s skin.

Concerned residents of Tianjin, China have reported that since the explosions that struck a warehouse in the Binhai district last week, dangerous and, as yet, unidentified white foam is falling from the skies causing burning and stinging sensations upon contact with skin.

As Shanghaiist.com report social media sites and Chinese media show the white foam in various areas.

Meteorological experts said Monday that rainfall would no longer pose direct danger to people’s health, according to a CCTV News report.

Authorities are worried that the white foam water will spread to other areas, which might potentially contain sodium cyanide, the toxic chemical that was found at the blast site.

Officials today said that at least 40 types of dangerous chemicals were detected at the blast zone, including 800 tons of ammonium nitrate and 500 tons of potassium nitrate, the Guardian reports.

Bao Jingling, chief engineer for the Tianjin Environmental Protection Bureau, previously said in an NBC News report that “if there is rain, it will produce hydrogen cyanide, so we are monitoring it closely,” adding that the military’s anti-chemical warfare division had been sent to the site on Sunday and the situation “currently…isn’t very serious”.

Hydrogen cyanide gas is described by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as being a “rapidly fatal” toxic chemical that can reduce the body’s ability to use oxygen.

In preparation for the rain, authorities reportedly built cofferdams around a 100,000-square-meter core area of the explosions which will be continually reinforced to prevent contaminated water from flowing out, Xinhua said.

Local monitoring centers reported a normal air quality reading in the city, and the Tianjin deputy mayor in charge of work safety said at a press conference yesterday that sodium cyanide within a three-kilometer radius of the core blast site would be neutralized by yesterday evening.

A total of 114 people have been confirmed dead with 70 more missing after two huge explosions and one smaller blast ripped through a warehouse storing hazardous materials last Wednesday.

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