Radiation
There is no such thing as sun cancer. Cancer caused by excessive exposure to ultraviolet rays is skin cancer.
No. It is not advisable to frequent exposure of any kind of watches to the sun light.
A person's chances of getting skin cancer can increase as a result of exposure to the sun due to the ultraviolet rays of the sun damaging the genetic material in the person's skin cells.
A person's chances of getting skin cancer can increase as a result of exposure to the sun due to the ultraviolet rays of the sun damaging the genetic material in the person's skin cells.
A person's chances of getting skin cancer can increase as a result of exposure to the sun due to the ultraviolet rays of the sun damaging the genetic material in the person's skin cells.
The benefits to being in nature in the sunshine is getting vitamins essential to your skin such as vitamin D. The sun has healing and therapeutic powers that are needed by our skin. By being in nature our skin is also protected from the negative effects of sun exposure.
The effects of sunbathing can be so bad that it can actually cause skin cancer. Excessive exposure to the sun also causes the skin to age prematurely.
The aging effects of UV were not a hot topic earlier. With the ozone hole, it came into focus.
It can cause sunburns and tans leading to skin damage which shows up even years later as freckles and brown spots. Skin cancer can also follow years of excess sun exposure.
Sunburn, prematurely aged skin, skin cancer, and a nice brown tan (if you are light skinned).
The ultimate risk of sun exposure with bare skin is skin cancer. Also, developing blisters and getting sunburned increases one's likelihood of developing skin cancer later in life.