![]() ![]() size, design, artistry, that kind of thing." And there are other people who just collect glassware the styles and so forth.īut there's so much of this damn stuff out there that, despite the fact that there's a variety of people that are interested in it, it really doesn't have a lot of value unless it's a particularly unique piece of glassware. "There are some people out there that are particularly interested in it because it's radioactive. "There are many different types of collectors that would be interested in this sort of item," Frame says of the glass. For years, Frame was also the curator at ORAU's Health Physics Historical Instrumentation Museum, also known as the Museum of Radiation and Radioactivity, which chronicles "the scientific and commercial history of radioactivity and radiation." The collection is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. It really looks kind of special," says Paul Frame, a retired health physicist at Tennessee's Oak Ridge Associated Universities, a consortium of schools founded after World War II as the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies. "It is kind of attractive because it has that iridescent glow to it under certain lighting conditions. But it's more of a curio now than anything, found in the form of pitchers and bowls and other glassware in flea markets, dusty attics, museums and among glass collectors, all reminders that at one time it was something desirable. It goes by a few different names and is even still being produced in some quantities in Europe. Yes, the Romans used uranium in their glass, and modern versions of the stuff still exists. ![]()
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