Current:Home > MyPurple is the new red: How alert maps show when we are royally ... hued -FinTechWorld
Purple is the new red: How alert maps show when we are royally ... hued
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:11:56
A version of this story originally ran on Feb. 5, 2021
This week, millions of Americans are anxiously scanning air quality maps focusing on two colors: red and purple. Red indicates "unhealthy" air quality, and purple? "Very unhealthy."
When did purple become the color more associated with danger?
"Red is the color of alert, of stop signs," agrees information designer Giorgia Lupi, a partner at Pentagram. But she sees the choice as logical. "Purple is the next color in the spectrum, from yellow, to orange, to red."
Lupi's job is to translate data into visual images that are easier for our minds to process. Color, for her, is a vital tool. While purple often carries positive associations in Western culture — such as sumptuousness and royalty — Lupi also points to the color's unsettling lividity. "Think of bruises, and the color purple on skin when talking about disease," she suggests. "It is another level. It's darker, and a more advanced stage, if you will."
As for how purple came to officially represent "very unhealthy" air quality: Back in the 1990s, the Environmental Protection Agency held a conference in Baltimore. There was a lot on the agenda, including a brand new, color-coded air quality index.
Scientist Susan Stone was there, along with a number of advocates and state, local and tribal officials.
The color designation was a topic "that really blew the discussion up," Stone recalls. "They were really getting too heated. We were all saying we need to call a break because otherwise people are going to start shoving each other."
In 2021, a spokesperson from the Environmental Protection Agency offered the following history:
In developing the AQI that we have today, the most heated discussions were about colors. At a large meeting in Baltimore (in either 1997 or 1998), we took an unscheduled break during the discussion of colors because we thought attendees were going to start pushing and shoving each other. The focus was entirely around the level of the standard and the color red. Those were the days before the huge wildfires out West, so it was extremely rare to get into the Hazardous range. We mostly hit very unhealthy levels with ozone. Even though we didn't have many continuous PM monitors then, we looked back at the filter-based PM data to evaluate the number of days in different categories.
There were two factions. The environmental groups wanted red in the Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups (USG) category to show that levels were higher than the levels of the NAAQS. EPA and many of the state, local and tribal representatives wanted red in the Unhealthy category, because that's when the AQI indicates that air quality can pose a risk to everyone. We were also concerned about message fatigue. In those days, it wasn't unusual to have 30 days when ozone was above the level of the standard.
We are not sure anyone knows for certain how the final decision was made, but in the end, DC decided to go with red at the Unhealthy category. The higher colors were decided by the AQI Team to show that as air quality worsens, it can be unhealthy for some people before it's unhealthy for everyone. And even once air quality reaches unhealthy, higher levels can dictate different actions. At orange, members of sensitive groups may have effects; at red, some members of the general population may be affected, and the effects to sensitive groups may be more serious. At purple it's an alert, and the risk is increased for everyone. Maroon - hazardous - represents emergency conditions. We don't typically see that except for wildfires and occasionally, dust storms.
Stone told NPR she never suspected how often purple would be used as a color for alarm.
"Looking at the data," she says, "if we put red as 'hazardous,' it would never occur."
Now, of course, hazardous days are not uncommon, and at least in some places, the AQI is turning to an even worse color: maroon. (Black, as it turns out, is less legible on maps, and it's hard to see borders.) For now, purple continues to show how royal a mess we're in.
veryGood! (36152)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Russia says southeast Ukraine is now the main focus of fighting in the war
- Former Trump adviser Peter Navarro's contempt trial to begin Tuesday
- Prosecutors in all 50 states urge Congress to strengthen tools to fight AI child sexual abuse images
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- YSE Beauty by Molly Sims Is Celebrity Skincare That’s Made for You
- Watch: Biscuit the 100-year-old tortoise rescued, reunited with Louisiana family
- Rent control laws on the national level? Biden administration offers a not-so-subtle push
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Jury selection begins in contempt case against ex-Trump White House official Peter Navarro
Ranking
- Small twin
- Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio faces sentencing in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack
- See Beyoncé's awe-inspiring Renaissance outfits, looks throughout career as tour nears end
- Missing Colorado climber found dead in Glacier National Park
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Priscilla Presley says Elvis 'respected the fact that I was only 14 years old' when they met
- $1,500 reward offered after headless antelope found in Arizona: This is the act of a poacher
- Pier collapses at University of Wisconsin terrace, sending dozens into lake, video shows
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Gilmore Girls Secret: The Truth About Why Rory Didn’t Go to Harvard
Meghan Markle Returns for Second Beyoncé Concert Alongside Kerry Washington and Kelly Rowland
'Most impressive fireball I have ever witnessed:' Witnesses dazzled by Mid-Atlantic meteor
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Biden to nominate former Treasury Secretary Jack Lew as ambassador to Israel
61 indicted in Georgia on racketeering charges connected to ‘Stop Cop City’ movement
Breanna Stewart sets WNBA single-season scoring record, Liberty edge Wings