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Thread: Lead Contamination In Game Meat

  1. #1
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    Lead Contamination In Game Meat

    Something a few of you may find quite interesting, Take from it what you will. Bit of back story - my partner who i have got into hunting/shooting & recently just shot her first deer, and being the inquisitive female that she is, started doing some research on lead, lead projectiles, & what the projectiles do upon impact with animals. A quick google search for something along the lines of "deer lead xray" etc, can find plenty of articles about lead contamination in game meat, and plenty of photos of xrays showing lead particles strewn throughout the body far away from the point of impact, which at first glance to someone that doesnt know any better looks very alarming. I felt that there was likely more to the story, especially with some of the articles showing things like lead particles at near the opposite end of where the animal was shot, which made me feel like there was a bit of "anti lead projectile" bias slipping in with some of the experiments and it seemed to me as though they may have been using some very explosive/varmint type projectiles for their "testing" to make things look worse than they actually are because that would fit in with their agenda.

    Dont take this in the wrong way, this is by no means me saying lead is good and not a problem, i use copper projectiles where i can and where they are effective for certain types of hunting i do. So here we go with the experiment.

    My partner called around a few vets in our area to see if anyone would be willing to xray some meat for us, explaining what we had in mind & we were lucky to find someone happy to do this for us. Great!

    The goal - to shoot a deer in a "worst case scenario" (i usually shoot head/neck or the meat saver in the crease shot where i can) which lines up with the type of hunting myself and alot of others do within nz, and get our own unbiased results.

    The below xray is of the front shoulder of a small red yearling i shot, did my best to create a worst case scenario (for me) and hit it square in the shoulder at no more than 30m.

    6.5 Creedmoor, 143gr ELDX @ 2720fps. Projectile was found under the skin on the opposite side of the animal, mushroomed and still relatively intact. weighs 119 grains now.

    Interesting to see the lead contamination even with hitting hard in the shoulder has stayed really local to the wound channel (an area you wouldnt try eat the meat from anyway) and hasnt spread far and wide like some/the internet would lead you to believe. Again, not condoning lead or saying its a good thing, just pointing out that the meat contamination with a typical used in nz hunting projectile may well not be as bad as some will try lead you to believe.

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  2. #2
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    fark its awesome to read and see that. good on you for making the effort to find out the truth..... please pass on my thanks and admiration to your vet.... really good they were willing to go the extra mile for you.
    and you used one of the softest most explody ones for testing too.... the likes of a coreloct or interloct would be even less....I still eat right up to the bullet hole. wouldnt be stuff all duck left to eat if we didnt.
    john m, Moa Hunter and 6.5 CRD like this.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

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    My opinion is that the shedded lead fragments will create bruising, and the bruised bits usually get thrown aside.
    veitnamcam, 199p, Swanny and 8 others like this.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Micky Duck View Post
    fark its awesome to read and see that. good on you for making the effort to find out the truth..... please pass on my thanks and admiration to your vet.... really good they were willing to go the extra mile for you.
    and you used one of the softest most explody ones for testing too.... the likes of a coreloct or interloct would be even less....I still eat right up to the bullet hole. wouldnt be stuff all duck left to eat if we didnt.
    Yeah, i tried to make the scenario as bad as possible while still keeping it within what would be a normal situation for the kind of hunting we do in nz (im sure nobodys out there shooting deer with incendiary rounds or varmint style projectiles) hence using a common nz hunting projectile rumoured to be bad at flying to bits, at close range, into hard shoulder/bone. i can only imagine that the really bad looking results online are using chamberings/projectiles that are nothing like what we would actually use to shoot game for the purpose of harvesting the meat here in nz.
    rugerman and Micky Duck like this.

  5. #5
    Member PillowDribbler's Avatar
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    Had a lady bring this up the other day who researches all this sort of stuff and she said if shot in front eat rear,shot in rear eat front.

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    It doesn't take a lot of lead to really damage your health. Especially when the smallest fragments are quite available in the digestive system.

    And please don't give the bruised meat to your dogs. They are your best friend, after all!
    199p, rugerman, mikee and 4 others like this.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by 6.5 CRD View Post
    Something a few of you may find quite interesting, Take from it what you will. Bit of back story - my partner who i have got into hunting/shooting & recently just shot her first deer, and being the inquisitive female that she is, started doing some research on lead, lead projectiles, & what the projectiles do upon impact with animals. A quick google search for something along the lines of "deer lead xray" etc, can find plenty of articles about lead contamination in game meat, and plenty of photos of xrays showing lead particles strewn throughout the body far away from the point of impact, which at first glance to someone that doesnt know any better looks very alarming. I felt that there was likely more to the story, especially with some of the articles showing things like lead particles at near the opposite end of where the animal was shot, which made me feel like there was a bit of "anti lead projectile" bias slipping in with some of the experiments and it seemed to me as though they may have been using some very explosive/varmint type projectiles for their "testing" to make things look worse than they actually are because that would fit in with their agenda.

    Dont take this in the wrong way, this is by no means me saying lead is good and not a problem, i use copper projectiles where i can and where they are effective for certain types of hunting i do. So here we go with the experiment.

    My partner called around a few vets in our area to see if anyone would be willing to xray some meat for us, explaining what we had in mind & we were lucky to find someone happy to do this for us. Great!

    The goal - to shoot a deer in a "worst case scenario" (i usually shoot head/neck or the meat saver in the crease shot where i can) which lines up with the type of hunting myself and alot of others do within nz, and get our own unbiased results.

    The below xray is of the front shoulder of a small red yearling i shot, did my best to create a worst case scenario (for me) and hit it square in the shoulder at no more than 30m.

    6.5 Creedmoor, 143gr ELDX @ 2720fps. Projectile was found under the skin on the opposite side of the animal, mushroomed and still relatively intact. weighs 119 grains now.

    Interesting to see the lead contamination even with hitting hard in the shoulder has stayed really local to the wound channel (an area you wouldnt try eat the meat from anyway) and hasnt spread far and wide like some/the internet would lead you to believe. Again, not condoning lead or saying its a good thing, just pointing out that the meat contamination with a typical used in nz hunting projectile may well not be as bad as some will try lead you to believe.

    Attachment 218178
    maybe the 6.5 crudmore was ya real problem - get a .270

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Barry the hunter View Post
    maybe the 6.5 crudmore was ya real problem - get a .270
    Yawn
    rugerman, Dama dama, 308 and 2 others like this.

  9. #9
    Gone................. mikee's Avatar
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    Always been something I have wondered about. Wondering no more.

    I have moved to copper bullets for the few deer I manage to stumble over occasionally and transfer to the freezer each year.

    I'm not shooting heaps of them so in the grand scheme of things the cost is not prohibitive.
    Trust the dog.........................................ALWAYS Trust the dog!!

  10. #10
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    Did your vet manage to save the yearling?

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    Interesting topic, well done for taking the tim eot do a little research. I happened across that article recently about 'lead contamination'. Written by a professor type yet very unscientific and uncontrolled. It did sound like it had a distinct bias / attempts to deliberate skew to the results to provide arguments for banning lead bullets.

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    Quote Originally Posted by svt40 View Post
    Interesting topic, well done for taking the tim eot do a little research. I happened across that article recently about 'lead contamination'. Written by a professor type yet very unscientific and uncontrolled. It did sound like it had a distinct bias / attempts to deliberate skew to the results to provide arguments for banning lead bullets.
    I found much the same. all the articles i could find seemed very biased toward the "lead is bad" argument and the xrays with lead strewn through the whole carcass just didnt stack up with what i have seen butchering many deer over the years. Hence the idea to run this experiment and see for ourselves with the practises and projectiles we use.
    veitnamcam and Micky Duck like this.

  13. #13
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    Awesome to see someone do a scientifically backed experiment. I've had this question come up a few times and feel alot more informed now thanks!

  14. #14
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    Did I read recently that moves are afoot to ban use of lead for all game shot in the UK for resale or public consumption? Anyone able to clarify that?
    I know a lot but it seems less every day...

    Due to the exorbitant cost of reloading components, warning shots will not be given.

  15. #15
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    Saw this article pop up on Rod n Rifle last year - https://rodandrifle.co.nz/articles/a...esearch-study/ Caught my eye as I sent 3 samples into Eric's study.

    I am pretty cautious about keeping well away from the wound channels but even then they did get a low hit on one of my samples - still below the level of concern even though was using a 7mm RM with SST projectiles but surprised they found any given I am generally pretty careful. I will probably try copper projectiles when I run through my stash of lead but not going to stress about it for now, enough animals around to leave the odd quarter on the hill.

    He did say that they were finding lead with the inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) at the Cawthron Institute that wasn't showing up on the xrays as it was too small.

    He is apparently going to publish the results soon but summary advice was:

    My recommendation from this work is that if you don’t know where the game meat came from, don’t eat it. Especially don’t feed game meat from unknown sources to kids. While you might be very careful not taking anything from the wound channel, someone else might not be as careful. If you want to use lead bullets and you make a good broadside shot, consider leaving the front quarters and just taking the back legs.
    Moa Hunter and 6.5 CRD like this.

 

 

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