Well, the deliberate contamination of food materials with low quality, cheap, non-edible or toxic substances is called food adulteration. |
The public perception is that it is wrong and that they do not agree with adulteration of the water supply to address a relatively small problem. |
The technique, which can detect adulteration and locational variation of active constituents of plant materials, has been patented in the U.S. and the European Union. |
Even in a court of law the judge accepts my expert witness opinion without adulteration or hesitation, and you are not beyond the courts. |
I found adulteration is extremely widespread: urea, soap powder, starch are very popular additives. |
But standard monitoring devices that measure the proper levels of those additives probably would quickly alert the plant to such adulteration. |