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  • Ep. 5 - The Shadow in the Woods
    2026/04/16

    Something moves at the edge of the headlights near Point Pleasant, West Virginia, and the witnesses can’t find words that fit. A huge shape. Red reflective eyes. The feeling of being watched. The story gets a name, The Mothman, and after the Silver Bridge collapses into the Ohio River, the legend locks into place as a “warning.” But I can’t stop thinking about a more unsettling possibility: what if the creature is a symptom of a landscape that was chemically changed long before anyone could measure it?

    We trace the sightings back to the West Virginia Ordnance Works, a sprawling WWII TNT facility built in urgency and left with toxic waste, acid byproducts, and residual explosive compounds that didn’t stop moving when the machinery did. Industrial contamination doesn’t just sit politely in the past. It can leach into soil and groundwater, linger for decades, and shape how a community feels and functions years before any official recognition. We also connect that pattern to modern environmental health crises, including PFAS and PFOA forever chemicals, where the harm is invisible at first and the language arrives late.

    Then we shift from story to action. A data center is proposed for land that has not been fully studied or remediated, and we lay out practical steps for tracking what’s coming: finding West Virginia DEP public notices, watching for air, water, and stormwater permits, using public comment periods to force real answers onto the record, and filing FOIA requests when the truth is buried in emails and internal reports. If you care about environmental justice, groundwater safety, and what gets built on top of wartime pollution, this is your roadmap.

    Subscribe, share this with someone who loves true crime science and strange history, and leave a review with your take: was the Mothman a monster, a myth, or a signal?


    Dedicated to Alex Cole - and the people of Mason County, West Virginia.

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    19 分
  • Ep. 4 - The Stranger on the Porch
    2026/04/08

    We trace how Appalachian storytelling can carry a warning that science later proves, then follow the C8 contamination story as it moves across the Ohio River like a threat that never needed permission. We walk through how a rural water manager fought for a single number the system could not ignore, and why making results public changed what happened next.
    • Appalachian communication as layered truth and shared burden
    • The snake parable as a model for predictable harm and misplaced trust
    • The Ohio River as boundary that never truly contains danger
    • DuPont Washington Works and the Little Hocking wellfield separated by less than a mile
    • Robert Griffin’s question “What about Ohio?” and why it upends the process
    • Proprietary testing and the problem of proof being controlled
    • C8 confirmed in 2002 and posted publicly without delay
    • Why regulatory systems require a measurable number to act
    • Using the Environmental Working Group tap water database to check contaminants by zip code
    For Killer resources and more practical magic, visit our Ko Fi page at Ko-fi.com/killerchemistry

    If this story makes you think differently about what’s in your tap, subscribe, share the episode with your friends - and leave a review so more people can find it.

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    22 分
  • Ep. 3 - A Flood of Discovery Reveals the Haint in the Water
    2026/03/31

    Something in Appalachia’s storytelling cuts closer to science than most people expect: the idea that certain things attach themselves, linger, and reshape your life even when you can’t see them. We use that lens to follow a real contaminant that behaves exactly that way, a synthetic forever chemical tied to Teflon production that doesn’t break down in the environment or move quickly through the human body. If you’ve heard “PFAS” or “PFOA” and wondered why communities describe it like a haunting, we make the mechanism clear and the stakes impossible to ignore.

    We walk from the hills of West Virginia to the water systems that carried C8 beyond the places anyone was watching. The chemistry matters here: perfluorinated compounds are built to resist heat, water, and degradation, which is great for manufacturing and brutal for public health. When PFAS contamination leaches into groundwater, private wells, and the Ohio River, it doesn’t simply “wash away.” It accumulates, and its half-life stretches into years, turning exposure into a long game that many families never agreed to play.

    Then the story tightens around paper. After Wilbur Tennant’s cattle deaths raised questions near the Washington Works plant, attorney Rob Bilott pulled on a thread that led into DuPont’s own records. What came back wasn’t clarity, but volume: decades of dense documents, shifting terminology, and code names that muddied the search for truth. We talk about why naming a chemical matters, how confusion blocks testing, and the moment corporate leaders knew containment wasn’t possible yet chose to wait because it wasn’t economically attractive.

    If this helped you see PFAS, C8, and corporate accountability in a sharper light, subscribe to Killer Chemistry, share, and leave a review so more people can find the story.

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    19 分
  • Ep. 2 - The Invisible Crime Scene
    2026/03/24

    When most people picture a crime scene, they imagine yellow police tape and obvious danger. But environmental contamination rarely announces itself, and that’s the chilling frame for this true crime science story from Washington Bottom, West Virginia.

    The Ohio River Valley is steeped in folklore, cryptids, UFOs, alien sightings, and Appalachian rules for surviving the dark, yet the real threat here isn’t a cryptid. It’s industrial pollution that seeps into creeks and wells and into bodies. Killer Chemistry connects that unease to a modern reality: PFAS contamination can turn ordinary land into an unmarked hazard zone.


    Killer Chemistry, explores how military science developed during the Manhattan Project became part of the biology of nearly every living thing on Earth.

    Hosted by award-winning investigative journalist and author Callie Lyons, the series brings together scientific context, legal history, and lived experience to examine the origins and global presence of what are commonly referred to as “forever chemicals.”

    Killer Chemistry is a true crime science podcast, presenting a complex and far-reaching story through a narrative format that is both accessible and deeply grounded in real-world events.

    Author of the first book to chronicle forever chemicals and how the mysterious failure of an entire herd of cattle led to the discovery of global contamination, Lyons draws on years of research, firsthand experience, and ongoing dialogue with scientists and researchers to guide listeners through the story.

    The series unfolds in easily digestible episodes, weaving scientific and legal concepts into a compelling narrative while offering practical insight listeners can apply within their own environments.

    For more information, Killer Resources and Practical Magic:

    https://ko-fi.com/killerchemistry/gallery

    Contact Killer Chemistry: killerchemistrypodcast@gmail.com

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    15 分
  • Ep. 1 - The Bomb's Secret Ingredient
    2026/03/23

    A new podcast, Killer Chemistry, explores how military science developed during the Manhattan Project became part of the biology of nearly every living thing on Earth.

    Hosted by award-winning investigative journalist and author Callie Lyons, the series brings together scientific context, legal history, and lived experience to examine the origins and global presence of what are commonly referred to as “forever chemicals.”

    Killer Chemistry is a true crime science podcast, presenting a complex and far-reaching story through a narrative format that is both accessible and deeply grounded in real-world events.

    Author of the first book to chronicle forever chemicals and how the mysterious failure of an entire herd of cattle led to the discovery of global contamination, Lyons draws on years of research, firsthand experience, and ongoing dialogue with scientists and researchers to guide listeners through the story.

    The series unfolds in easily digestible episodes, weaving scientific and legal concepts into a compelling narrative while offering practical insight listeners can apply within their own environments.

    Support the podcast and get all the extras:

    https://ko-fi.com/killerchemistry/gallery

    Contact Killer Chemistry: killerchemistrypodcast@gmail.com

    Support the show

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    13 分