The active ingredients of anti-bacterial soaps and cleaning agents have  come under scrutiny by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S.  Food and Drug Administration, due to both environmental and human health  concerns.
 Two closely related antimicrobials, triclosan and triclocarban, are at  issue. Triclosan (TCS) has a structural resemblance to dioxin, and triclocarban  (TCC) is one of the top 10 pharmaceuticals and personal care products most  frequently found in the environment and in U.S. drinking water resources.
 Researcher Rolf Halden and co-workers at the Biodesign Institute at Arizona  State University have traced the active ingredients of soaps – used as long ago  as the 1960s – to their current location, the shallow sediments of New York  City's Jamaica Bay and the Chesapeake Bay, the nation's largest estuary.
 "Our group has shown that antimicrobial ingredients used a half a century  ago, by our parents and grandparents, are still present today at  parts-per-million concentrations in estuarine sediments underlying the brackish  waters into which New York City and Baltimore discharge their treated domestic  wastewater," said Halden, a new member of the institute's Center for  Environmental Biotechnology. "This extreme environmental persistence by itself  is a concern, and it is only amplified by recent studies that show both  triclosan and triclocarban to function as endocrine disruptors in mammalian cell  cultures and in animal models."
 Aiding in his team's research was another type of contamination: the  radioactive fallout from nuclear testing conducted in the second half of the  last century. Using the known deposition history and half-lives of two  radioactive isotopes, cesium-137 and beryllium-7, Halden and his collaborators  Steven Chillrud, Jerry Ritchie, and Richard Bopp assigned the approximate time  at which sediments observed to contain antimicrobial residues had been deposited  in the two East Coast locations.
 Read more via  eponline.com