Graphene is not a Covid-19 vaccine ingredient, nor is it found in beach sand
- This article is more than one year old.
- Published on October 27, 2021 at 17:40
- 5 min read
- By James OKONG'O, AFP South Africa
Copyright © AFP 2017-2024. Any commercial use of this content requires a subscription. Click here to find out more.
The video has been shared more than 800 times since it was posted on Facebook on October 10, 2021.
In the video, two unidentified women claiming to be in Melbourne, Australia, use a small magnet to trap dark particles on a beach.
“When this black, which we believe to be graphene, gets on the magnet, it tends to grow,” says one of the women.
A few moments later, her companion remarks that “it’s heavy metals and it’s also in the jab”, before repeating that “it’s one of the ingredients in the jab and that’s going into your body”.
As the black particles cling to the magnet, she asks: “See those spiky bits? That spike protein is going in your body after the jab and that dehumanises you, pretty much.”
Both women proceed to question how the black substance gets on the beach and together conclude that it comes from “chemtrails – they are spraying it in the air, we are breathing this, they are putting it in the vaccines, they are putting it in our food, it’s in our clothing, it’s in the masks”.
Finally, they claim that it magnetises people’s arms after a Covid-19 vaccination.
But all these claims are false.
Graphite and graphene
Graphite is a naturally occurring form of crystalline carbon found in metamorphic and igneous rocks. It is extremely soft and has a wide range of uses in manufacturing including being used in pencil tips.
Graphene is a nanomaterial (a compound made up of tiny particles) that is reported to have antibacterial and antiviral properties. It is an artificially produced and electrically conductive form of elemental carbon and is considered one of the lightest and strongest materials that have the ability to conduct both heat and electricity.
As previously reported by AFP Fact Check, graphene oxide is a super strong, ultra-thin derivative of graphene, which has been reported to have antibacterial and antiviral properties.
Graphene not found on beaches
Dr Craig Smith of the Geological Society of South Africa told AFP Fact Check that “graphene is a man-made substance” and not found on beaches.
Smith said that what the video shows is typical of many beaches around the world “where the beach sand has dark mineral grains mixed with lighter coloured quartz and feldspar grains”.
He added that some beaches have heavy mineral constituents abundant enough to allow for mining.
“The commonly found minerals in beaches include zircon (used in abrasives) and ilmenite and rutile (titanium-bearing minerals used in paint).”
In Australia, the main elements extracted from mineral sand deposits are titanium from ilmenite and rutile sands, zirconium from zircon sands and thorium from monazite.
In South Africa, Richards Bay Minerals in KwaZulu-Natal is known for processing rutile and zircon.
Graphene in vaccines 'a myth'
Experts told AFP Fact Check that the approved Covid-19 vaccines don't have graphene, graphene oxide or graphite as an ingredient.
Marc Mendelson, a professor of infectious diseases at the Groote Schuur Hospital in South Africa, said that “none of the vaccines approved for use by the World Health Organization (WHO) or any other internationally recognised regulatory bodies contains graphite, graphene or its derivative, graphene oxide".
The claim "is a myth and misinformation that has already been disproven," he said.
Mendelson added that there are no heavy metals in Covid-19 vaccines as the video claims.
Graphene oxide is being studied in vaccines as a possible adjuvant or ingredient to help the shot trigger a stronger immune response.
The WHO also told AFP Fact Check that “none of the authorised COVID-19 vaccines contains graphene or graphene oxide as an ingredient.”
A list of vaccine ingredients published on the global health agency’s website shows that no authorised Covid-19 vaccines contain graphene or graphene oxide. The list features ingredients for Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Sputnik, Sinopharm, CanSino, Sinovac, Anhui Zhifei, and Bharat Biotech vaccines.
AFP has previously debunked claims about graphene and Covid-19 vaccines here and here.
Spike proteins
The two women in the video also allege that the dark particles contain spike proteins.
The spike protein is located on the outside of a coronavirus and allows SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes Covid-19 – to enter human cells.
Mendelson told AFP Fact Check that “the spike protein is a molecule positioned on the surface of the virus, whose job it is to interact with a receptor (like a key into a lock) on the human cell surface, enabling entry of the virus into the cell. It is shaped like a ‘spike’. It is not made of metal!”
Mendelson added that there was no evidence that the spike proteins generated by human cells following vaccination are toxic.
Here is a video from the WHO showing how coronavirus vaccines work.
Chemtrails and magnetic arms
The video also claims that graphene is dispersed onto beaches via chemtrails or aerial spraying and that vaccines make people’s arms magnetic. Both claims are false.
The chemtrail theory holds that organisations and powerful people are engaged in a secret programme to add toxic chemicals to the atmosphere using aircraft or rockets.
However, the white lines that appear behind an aircraft are water vapour released at high altitudes which condenses into ice crystals. They are known as contrails.
Geologist Smith said that graphene cannot be dispersed aerially.
Meanwhile, Dr Stephen Schrantz, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Chicago Medicine, told AFP Fact Check that "getting a Covid-19 vaccine cannot cause your arm to be magnetised. This is a hoax, plain and simple".
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has also dismissed the idea that the vaccines contain magnetic substances, saying: “Covid-19 vaccines do not contain ingredients that can produce an electromagnetic field at the site of your injection.”
AFP Fact Check has also previously debunked the claim here and here.
Is there content that you would like AFP to fact-check? Get in touch.
Contact us