I’m Diana Oviedo Vargas, Ph.D., assistant research scientist and principal investigator of the Biogeochemistry Group at Stroud Water Research Center.
Earlier this year, a scientific article I had written with my collaborators at the Center for PFAS Solutions was published in Nature Scientific Reports . In it, we discuss the findings from our research on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also known as “forever chemicals,” and how they can contaminate our soil and water with the application of biosolids on farm fields.
Then in March, I spoke with Hiroko Tabuchi, a New York Times reporter, who’s been investigating and detailing the story of PFAS-laden sewage sludge in America. Her series describes how farmers, businesses, families, and livestock who rely on land and water resources contaminated with PFAS are impacted. |
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