Tag: Asbestos

Where History Means Knowledge. Be Informed.

Asbestos History: A Confusing and Conflict Filled Subject.

I am a Historian and not a scientist. The more I dig into the history, the more this (to me) becomes self-evident. Let’s discuss the 1991 article by scientist Phillip E. Enterline, PhD who claimed that, after reviewing the available literature existing between 1934 and 1965, there was no consensus in the United States that…
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Asbestos: the Connecting Link joining the Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral Kingdoms?

I suspect that the title might have a few of you scratching your head. That’s okay as we should all learn at least one new thing every day. This proposition of asbestos combining the three kingdoms was discussed by Oliver Bowles in his 1946 book entitled Asbestos: The Silk of the Mineral Kingdom which he…
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Asbestos History: Finding Sources for your Research

For those of you interested in researching specific topics in asbestos history, whether for lawsuits or otherwise, finding the primary source materials is critical. At the same time, secondary sources by scientists and historians in the know are a good starting point. One of my favorite research books is the 1963 Asbestos Fundamentals: origin, properties,…
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The Norway Courts: If you lie to us about asbestos and ship breaking, you go to jail.

I don’t know the Norway legal system and nor do I have any insights into the judges who sit on this appeal court. However, being familiar with many other courts and judges, I am duly impressed. The link to the entire 36 page, easy to read, decision is at https://theasbestosblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/2022-Norway-Court-Decision-Asbestos_10102022.pdf. The case involved a group…
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Asbestos Air Sampling and Material Testing: The need for better technology.

The need for better technology to determine the presence of asbestos fibers in the air and in materials was brought home recently in the 2020 study entitled “Asbestos-containing materials in abandoned residential dwellings in Detroit” by a team of authors led by Dr. Alfred Franzblau at the University of Michigan. The most important findings of…
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Breaking Ships and Asbestos

Breaking ships at the end of their lives (versus sinking them to be a reef in the Ocean or turning them into museums) is big business with a lot of battles between purchasers/countries that want the business and steel against environmental and labor groups. Publicity matters; a lot. Just Google ” aircraft carrier San Paulo”…
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Asbestos, Ship Breaking in Bangladesh, and World-Systems Analysis: Standing on the Shoulders of Those who have come before me.

As I dig into the historical research concerning these seemingly independent concepts and begin to conceptualize my analysis, I have found one scholar who’s work has directly touched on all three of these issues. R. Scott Frey authored a paper entitled “The International Traffic in Asbestos” in 2006 and authored “Breaking Ships in the World-System:…
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Asbestos + The Most Dangerous Job on the Planet.

What do you get when you combine asbestos, one of the most dangerous minerals in the world, https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/deadliest-minerals-and-gemstones.html (number 3 per this article) with ship breaking in Bangladesh, called by at least one article as “the most dangerous job on the plant.” Certainly a topic worth discussing and, for me, worth devoting the next 9…
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Asbestos Ancient History: Interesting Background Published in Scientific American during 1997

The below asbestos historical discussion contained in the July 1997 edition of Scientific American in “Asbestos Revisited” by James Alleman and Brooks Mossman discusses the ancient mineral background in much more detail than typical similar discourses and is worthy of a blog. That being said, the article contains one significant mistake: Pages 74-75 at the…
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Johns-Manville at the Very End: No Lessons Learned.

I have previously posted information about conduct by Johns-Manville in the 1930s to 1950s, especially their legal department, that was, to say the least, disheartening. See my Blogs at https://theasbestosblog.com/?p=769 and at https://theasbestosblog.com/?p=2808. So, did they see the errors of their ways over time or attempt to draw a line under which they would not…
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