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Hunting with lead: Association between blood lead levels and wild game consumption
(www.sciencedirect.com)
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I looked into this a while back, and found that the main reason for an increase in lead began when smokeless, high velocity bullets displaced the 'big and slow' bullets of the blackpowder era.
The high velocity rounds go so fast, the bullets break up and spray an ultra fine lead shrapnel further into the muscle around the actual wound cavity, requiring that more of the meat near the wound be cut away and wasted to avoid the contaminated parts. In contrast, older slow bullets stay almost fully intact, meaning the surrounding meat can be cut very close to the wound without fear of contamination.
Most hunters either aren't aware of this fact, or if they are, dismiss it so as not to be seen as a 'lesser man'.
Nowadays there are solutions to this problem in the form of all-copper bullets for rifles, and steel shot for shotguns, which don't use any lead in their construction.
In addition to the bullets themselves, the primer that disperses in your face has lead too. There's a nice graphic here: https://projects.seattletimes.com/2014/loaded-with-lead/1/