Vaseline is a brand of petroleum jelly-based products owned by Anglo-Dutch company Unilever. Products include plain petroleum jelly and a selection of skin creams, soaps, lotions, cleansers, and deodorants.
In many languages, the word "Vaseline" is used as generic for petroleum jelly; in Portuguese and some Spanish-speaking countries, the Unilever products are called Vasenol.
Vaseline is found to be very helpful with chapped and dry lips/skin. On the packaging, as of 2018, it claims "Guaranteed purity for soft, smooth and visibly healthy-looking skin" It is not intended for use in wounds, animal bites, or burns.
Video Vaseline
History
The first known reference to the name Vaseline was by the inventor of petroleum jelly, Robert Chesebrough in his U.S. patent for the process of making petroleum jelly (U.S. Patent 127,568) in 1872. "I, Robert Chesebrough, have invented a new and useful product from petroleum which I have named Vaseline..."
The name "vaseline" is said by the manufacturer to be derived from German Wasser "water" + Greek ?????? (elaion) "olive oil".
In 1859, Chesebrough went to the oil fields in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and learned of a residue called "rod wax" that had to be periodically removed from oil rig pumps. The oil workers had been using the substance to heal cuts and burns. Chesebrough took samples of the rod wax back to Brooklyn, extracted the usable petroleum jelly, and began manufacturing the medicinal product he called Vaseline.
Vaseline was made by the Chesebrough Manufacturing Company until the company was purchased by Unilever in 1987.
Maps Vaseline
Uses
While Vaseline can be used as a lubricant, it can also be used as a moisture insulator for local skin conditions characterized by tissue dehydration.
Vaseline has been reported to be highly-refined, triple-purified and regarded as non-carcinogenic.. The Environmental Working Group regards it as having low overall health hazard, but high concerns about non-reproductive organ system toxicity associated with the product..
References
Notes
Citations
External links
- Media related to Vaseline at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
Source of the article : Wikipedia