Once mined in many places throughout the world but now mostly in  Canada, Russia, Africa, and China, asbestos is a naturally-occurring  mineral that was used for decades as an insulator for a host of  products, many used in homes throughout the world.
Six different types of asbestos have been identified. These types are divided into two groups:
- Serpentine – This variety of asbestos has a layered structure and curly fibers. Chrysotile asbestos is the only type in this category and was the kind of asbestos most often used in buildings in the United States.
 - Amphibole – This kind of asbestos is characterized by a long chain-like structure of fibers that are sharp and straight and easy to inhale. Found in this category are the remaining 5 types of asbestos – amosite, crocidolite, anthophyllite, tremolite, and actinolite. The first two were widely used in products until the 1980s and amosite is the 2nd most likely type to be found in buildings.
 
These kinds of asbestos are also often categorized by their color,  though tremolite, anthophyllite, and actinolite remain unclassified.
- White – chrysotile
 - Brown – amosite
 - Blue – crocidolite
 
Amosite Asbestos
The commercial production of amosite or “brown” asbestos ended within  the last 10 years and it is no longer mined. It was at one time,  however, the second-most commonly used form of asbestos and many  individuals were exposed to it during its use. It was employed as  insulation in factories and buildings and also as acoustical material  and anti-condensation material. Its use has been banned in most  countries for about the last 30 years.
Crocidolite Asbestos
Crocidolite accounted for about 4 percent of all asbestos once used  in the United States. This “blue” asbestos is harder and more brittle  than other types of the mineral and can break easily, releasing  dangerous needle-like fibers that are easily inhaled. This is  undoubtedly the most lethal form of asbestos and was often used in  making yarns and rope lagging and as reinforcement materials for  plastics.
Crocidolite was generally mined in Western Australia, Bolivia, and South Africa and the percentage of miners who developed asbestos cancer  due to crocidolite exposure stands at a staggering 18 percent. In the  town of Wittenoom, Australia (population 20,000), where blue asbestos  was mined for many years, more than 1,000 people have died of  mesothelioma with officials estimating that another 1,000 will  eventually perish from asbestos-related diseases. The town is now a  ghost town, with 8 residents remaining, and has literally been erased  from the map.
Chrysotile Asbestos
The most common type of asbestos and the only kind that is still  mined, chrysotile was the most widely used in the world’s developed  countries. Estimates show that about 90-95 percent of all asbestos that  remains in buildings in the U.S. and Canada is of this variety.  Obviously, because it was the most widely used, it accounts for the most  health problems, though the companies that mine it continue to attest  to its safety.
Chrysotile is most often used in fireproofing and in insulation  products and was widely used aboard U.S. Navy ships during World War II  and the Korean War. It can also be woven into cloth and was once used in  theater curtains and – ironically – to make protective clothing for  those who worked with high temperature equipment or liquids. It was also  an ingredient in cement and was helpful in the manufacture of friction  products because of its heat-resistant properties. These included brake  shoes, clutches, and disk pads. Its most recent uses were in the nuclear  energy industry.
Today, the Canadian Chrysotile Institute maintains that the asbestos  they mine is much safer these days and claims that they only market  dense and non-friable products in which the chrysotile fiber is  “encapsulated in a matrix of either cement or resin.” Previously, the  chrysotile that was sold in the marketplace crumbled easily and was  quite toxic.
Nonetheless, most experts maintain that ALL asbestos can cause  cancer, even chrysotile, and even when exposure is minimal. This has  been demonstrated by the fact that those who live near chrysotile mines  have a much higher incidence of mesothelioma than the general public.
Anthophyllite Asbestos
Anthophyllite asbestos, also known as “brown” asbestos is composed  predominantly of iron and magnesium. The fibers are known to be long and  flexible. Of the amphibole asbestos sub-classification, brown asbestos  can be found in many talc mines and has been associated different  respiratory disorders, though is not conclusively associated with  mesothelioma as other varieties of asbestos are.
Tremolite Asbestos
As an amphibole variety of asbestos fiber, tremolite asbestos is  indeed associated with the development of mesothelioma and other  asbestos-related cancer. Like other varieties of asbestos, tremolite  asbestos is composed predominantly of magnesium and can range from  off-white to a dark green in color. Tremolite asbestos is particularly  common in vermiculite and vermiculite deposits.
Actinolite Asbestos
Actinolite asbestos is a variety of the sub-classification of  amphibole asbestos and, as such, its makeup and consistency is similar  to other forms of this subset. Made predominantly of magnesium,  actinolite asbestos is extremely rare and ranges in color from white to  dark brown. Actinolite was not known to be used in asbestos products  because of its rarity, but is known to be found in metamorphic rock.
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