I can't base it on any even remotely scientific argument, but to me, something seems wrong with that conclusion; it just seems weird that it would be that easy to get a poisonous concentration. I guess it is that the deadly concentration is of the gas in air, across multiple inhalations. If so, one needs much more of the gas.
But as I said I simply don't know. Can anybody else?
In the end, we need a pool that is two parts water to one part chlorine and would probably burn the
eyeballs out of your sockets and make your skin peel away from your bones (this calls for a pool boy who
can only be criminally sadistic). If you and three million other people could get at this pool and unload
your pee into it before your bodies melted, before the crowd crushed you to death, and before you drowned
from the massive tidal wave of pee... yes, you could feasibly die of cyanogen chloride poisoning
originating from chlorinated water and pee.Also, it is responsible for some ignoble controversy around the new public bathhouse in my old home town. Apparently there was a perfect storm, in that the building both has a poorly designed ventilation system, _and_ inconveniently located restrooms which tempt people to...
No deaths so far, but several people complained about the bathhouse air making their asthma flare up, and when measured the concentration was above the health and safety limits [2].
[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pool_chlorine_hypothesis [2]http://www.sydsvenskan.se/lund/kansliga-personer-varnas-for-...
One of my favorites: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/113/the-story-of-sc...