FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE听|听December 17, 2012
For the holiday weight-gain season: The chemistry behind calorie counts and nutrition labels
WASHINGTON, December 17, 2012 鈥� With the holiday season a high-risk period for packing on unwanted pounds, the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 (ACS) today that may lend perspective on this year鈥檚 battle of the bulge. Produced by the world鈥檚 largest scientific society, it explains the science behind the calorie counts and other information on those Nutrition Facts Labels on food packages. Available at , the video tells the story of how scientists first determined the calorie content of food in the 1800s, and how scientists determine fat, protein and carbohydrate levels in foods today.
The video explains that the calorie content of food was determined in the late 1800s by chemist Wilbur O. Atwater. Atwater built a four-by-eight-foot device called a respiration calorimeter, which was big enough to allow a person to step into it. It measured the amount of heat they released, the amount of oxygen they consumed and the carbon dioxide they gave off after eating a variety of foods.
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Using this device, Atwater was able to measure the precise amount of energy contained in thousands of food items. He found that carbohydrates and proteins were worth 4 calories per gram and fats about 9 calories per gram, which is about 1/28th of an ounce. This 4-9-4 rule remains embodied in today鈥檚 Nutrition Facts Labels.
The video, from the award-winning Digital Services Unit in the ACS Office of Public Affairs, is based on an article in the latest issue of , ACS鈥� quarterly magazine for high school students.
To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 contact newsroom@acs.org.
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the science behind calories and Nutrition Facts
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