Aerogard

Aerogard is an Australian brand of outdoor insect repellent (that is applied directly to the skin).[1] It comes in aerosol sprays, bottled creams and roll-ons, the manufacturer owned by the British company Reckitt Benckiser.

Active ingredient

The active ingredient in Aerogard is N, N-diethyl-meta-toluamide (DEET).[2] Recent low odour formulas use Picaridin (See Icaridin)

History

An insect repellent developed by Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)'s Doug Waterhouse made the 1963 visit of Elizabeth II to Australia more pleasant. Although the Queen was meant to be sprayed with the repellent at a garden party held at Government House in Canberra, the aide responsible lost his nerve. The next day Government House staff made sure the Queen was sprayed. Journalists following the Queen noted the absence of flies around the official party, and word about CSIRO's new fly-repellent spread.

A few days later Mortein called Doug Waterhouse for his formula, which he gave, as was CSIRO's policy at the time.[3]

gollark: which could possibly be cool.
gollark: In my `writing_ideas` notes which will probably never be written I have> The world is a simulation, and a very buggy one. You can phase through walls if you walk through them at just the right angle wearing certain colors of T-shirt. Why is the clothing tear resistance code tied into collision detection? Why does it care about color? Nobody knows; it's filled with bizarre legacy code. Occasionally someone finds a really exploitable issue, runs off to certain regions of the world to “test things”, and disappears. Perhaps they manage to escape into reality somehow. Perhaps they're somehow “hired” by the admins to patch further issues. Perhaps they're just deleted to preserve stability.
gollark: (*Ra*, *Off to be the Wizard*, *Wizard's Bane*, and I can't remember any more right now)
gollark: It just needs to be sufficiently unfathomable and complex that most people won't do it.
gollark: You don't really need much of an explanation for that without this, though?

References

  1. David Woodsmall (13 August 2014). "REALLY Complete Insecticide Repellent & Insecticide Information - Free". Woodsmall.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  2. "Laboratory and field evaluation of commercial repellent formulations against mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) in Queensland, Australia". ResearchGate. doi:10.1111/j.1440-6055.2005.00498.x. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  3. "Aeroguard - CSIROpedia". CSIROpedia. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. Archived from the original on 25 April 2015. Retrieved 20 April 2015.


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