Japanese researchers said Friday they had found high mercury levels in residents of the dolphin-hunting town of Taiji, featured in the Oscar-winning documentary The Cove , but no

A survey of some 1,000 Taiji residents found high mercury levels in the hair of some, but found no-one who had fallen ill as a result, Koji Okamoto, the director of the National Institute for Minamata Disease, told AFP.
"Out of 1,000 people we surveyed, there were some people whose hair had high levels of methyl mercury," he said. "Then we examined some 200 people including these people. But we found no neurological cases of methyl mercury toxicity."
Detailed study results will be released in a town hall meeting in the southwestern fishing town on Sunday, he said.
Taiji hit the global spotlight with the release last year of the hard hitting eco-documentary "The Cove" on its annual dolphin hunt, which was shot in part using hidden cameras and highlighted the mercury threat.
The film, which featured graphic footage of the sea mammals being harpooned to death, angered local fishermen, who say dolphin hunting is part of their culture and who slammed the covert techniques of the film crew.
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Methyl mercury was behind Japan's worst industrial pollution disaster, in which a factory dumped the toxin into the bay of Minamata in southwestern Japan from the 1950s, poisoning the marine habitat and the local population.
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Source-AFP
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