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Book
Status report on the CO "hot spot" project
Authors: ---
Year: 1978 Publisher: [Ann Arbor, Mich.] : Characterization and Applications Branch, Emission Control Technology Division, Office of Mobile Source Air Pollution Control, Office of Air and Waste Management, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,

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Book
Earth A.D. : the poisoning of the American landscape and the communities that fought back
Author:
ISBN: 1934170836 Year: 2020 Publisher: Port Townsend, Washington : Process,

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[This book] documents two environmental disasters born of the American Industrial Revolution. The Tar Creek Superfund Site is located in the Tri-State Mining District that straddles the corners of three states: Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas. The author focused mainly on Picher, Oklahoma--home to the densest lead mines in the region. In the decades following World War II the mining began to dry up, the mining companies themselves skipped town and left a literal mountain range of mine tailings covering every surface. Lead was in the roads, the buildings, the streets, people's homes, schools, driveways. It poisoned generation after generation until a few citizen activists noticed something was wrong and did something about it.The second half of the book explores the authors old neighborhood of Greenpoint in Brooklyn, New York. Greenpoint is home to two Superfund sites, Newtown Creek and the NuHart Plastics Factory. The first site is associated with spilled oil from the Standard Oil company. The second site is associated with leaks of cancer-causing phthalates. Earth A.D is film documentarian Michael Nirenberg's, sweeping oral history of two American Superfund sites. Comprised of hundreds of interviews with political, environmental, corporate leaders as well as the citizens affected by living in these toxic zones, Nirenberg tells the stories behind the Tar Creek lead mine wasteland in rural Oklahoma compared and contrasted with the 150-year history of chemical poisoning of Newtown Creek in the now real-estate hotspot, Brooklyn, NY. The sagas of Tar Creek and Newtown show how wealth, racism, and the rural-urban divide influences how environmental disasters are viewed. The diverse voices are woven into a quick-paced modern-day thriller drawn from firsthand interviews with the people who both witnessed and participated in what became some of the most expensive man-made environmental disasters. Everyone from governors to scientists to fishermen to teachers to kids tells their stories of Earth after disaster in this riveting true story. Earth A.D. is a documentation of the past and a warning to the future.

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