Or, there's the hypothesis that these reported values for benzene were in error.
180,000ppm? "ppm" is "Parts per million", so this apparently means that benzene was 18% of the sample. That's a lot. Even the "daily average" level quoted is 1.8%.
Let's ask the question: if these values are accurate, what results would we expect to see?
From the
Materials Safety Data Sheet for benzene, we find:
The "IHL-HMN LCLO 2000 ppm/5h" is probably the most relevant value. Looking at the links for the abbreviations provided, we see that this is the lowest published lethal concentration for humans inhaling benzene. It's also 1/9th the amount cited as the daily average. If the daily average figure is accurate, we'd expect to see some people dying of benzene inhalation.
The "IHL-MUS LC50 9980 ppm" value is the lethal concentration that will kill 50 percent of mice inhaling benzene. It's about half the above daily average, so if it's accurate, we'd expect a lot of dead mice, far more than 50% of those in the area.
Multiply these effects by a factor of 10 for the reported "spikes", and one wonders why there weren't reports of massive deaths of New Yorkers due to benzene inhalation.
And these are only for short-term exposure to massive quantities of benzene. There are long-term chronic problems that arise from doses in the 10's to 100' of ppm, so we'd expect, at a minimum, to see some increase in those effects as well.
Or, perhaps the reported figures are a tad bit off?
There also could be other effects that explain this. Without knowing exactly where the sensors were placed, and how many there were, we also cannot tell how much benzene was actually present. Perhaps a single sensor located near a pocket of material prone to releasing benzene when ignited was overwhelmed by a purely local increase in concentration for a brief period of time. Such transient events really can't tell us much about what was going on in the pile over the long term.
To latch onto such figures without giving any consideration to their reliability and/or to how representative they are, in order to support yet another theory with questionable support, is disingenuous at best.