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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Girls now reaching puberty at age nine, thanks to chemicals in the food supply (milk and plastics)

Girls now reaching puberty at age nine, thanks to chemicals in the food supply (milk and plastics): "(NaturalNews) The average age of puberty in girls is now nine, in a phenomenon increasingly being blamed on rising obesity and exposure to hormone-disrupting pollutants in the food supply.

The study was conducted in 2006 by researchers from the world-renowned Department of Growth and Reproduction at University Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark. The researchers found that among 1,000 girls, the average age of breast development was nine years and 10 months, a full year earlier than when a similar study was conducted in 1991.

'We were very surprised that there had been such a change in a period of just 15 years,' researcher Anders Juul said.

Although the study was conducted in Denmark, experts believe that it applies to other parts of the First World, including Europe and the United States. This earlier age of maturation is even more striking when compared with the 19th century, when girls reached puberty at an average age of 15, and boys reached it at 17. Since then, the age of puberty has moved back steadily, until age 14 for boys and age 12 for girls were formally declared 'normal' in the 1960s. These numbers were based on the average age of first period for girls and of voices breaking for boys."

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