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    Explore "water quality" with insightful episodes like "10 Years After Flint, The Fight To Replace Lead Pipes Continues", "Salamander search party", "Addressing Water Contamination With Indigenous Science", "Did tea-drinking cut deaths in the Industrial Revolution?" and "Short Stuff: Lake Erie's Rights" from podcasts like ""Short Wave", "Unexplainable", "Short Wave", "More or Less: Behind the Stats" and "Stuff You Should Know"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    10 Years After Flint, The Fight To Replace Lead Pipes Continues

    10 Years After Flint, The Fight To Replace Lead Pipes Continues
    Ten years ago, Flint, Mich. switched water sources to the Flint River. The lack of corrosion control in the pipes caused lead to leach into the water supply of tens of thousands of residents. Pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha recognized a public health crisis in the making and gathered data proving the negative health impact on Flint's young children. In doing so, she and community organizers in Flint sparked a national conversation about lead in the U.S. water system that persists today.

    Today on the show, host Emily Kwong and science correspondent Pien Huang talk about the state of Flint and other cities with lead pipes. Efforts to replace these pipes hinge on proposed changes to the EPA's Lead and Copper Rule.

    Have questions or comments for us to consider for a future episode? Email us at shortwave@npr.org — we'd love to hear from you!

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    Salamander search party

    Salamander search party
    One of the world’s most biodiverse aquifers is full of strange, blind creatures that have evolved in isolation for millions of years. But one is missing. This episode was reported by Benji Jones and Mandy Nguyen, who produced the episode. Editing from Meradith Hoddinott, Katherine Wells, Brian Resnick, and Noam Hassenfeld, who scored the episode. Mixing and sound design from Cristian Ayala. Fact-checking from Richard Sima. For more, go to http://vox.com/unexplainable It’s a great place to view show transcripts and read more about the topics on our show. Also, email us! unexplainable@vox.com We read every email. Support Unexplainable by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    Addressing Water Contamination With Indigenous Science

    Addressing Water Contamination With Indigenous Science
    Ranalda Tsosie grew up in the Navajo Nation, close to a number of abandoned uranium mines. The uranium from those mines leached into the groundwater, contaminating some of the unregulated wells that Ranalda and many others relied on for cooking, cleaning and drinking water. Today on the show, Ranalda talks to host Aaron Scott about her path to becoming an environmental chemist to study the extent of contamination in her home community using a blend of western and Diné science methods.

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    Did tea-drinking cut deaths in the Industrial Revolution?

    Did tea-drinking cut deaths in the Industrial Revolution?

    Could an explosion in tea-drinking explain a decline in deaths in England during the industrial revolution? Professor Francisca Antman, an economist at the University of Colorado Boulder believes it might.

    Tim Harford discovers that dusting down the data from tea shipments and local burial records gives us surprising insight into how boiling water for tea accidentally improved public health.

    Presenter: Tim Harford Producer: Nathan Gower Sound Engineer: Graham Puddifoot

    Freshwater Mussels Are Dying And No One Knows Why

    Freshwater Mussels Are Dying And No One Knows Why
    In 2016, biologists and fishermen across the country started to notice something disturbing. Freshwater mussels were dying in large numbers. NPR National Correspondent Nathan Rott tells us about the unsolved mystery surrounding the die-off, the team racing to figure it out, and why mussels are so important for the health of our streams and rivers.

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