Scientist Who Analyzed Dust From 9/11 Attacks Dies Suddenly

Sputnik

Environmental scientist Paul J. Lioy, whose work focused on the health effects of the dust produced by 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York, died suddenly at the age of 68 at Newark Liberty International Airport.

The cause of Lioy’s death has yet to be determined, according to his wife Jean Lioy.  

Dr. Lioy became one of the first scholars to gather samples of the dust from the ruins of New York’s Twin Towers, soon after he witnessed the 2001 terrorist attack, the New York Times reported. He scraped the samples from cars nearby laboratory testing, after Lioy noted the “weird texture and color” of the dust.

“It was unprecedented in terms of the complex characteristics of the materials released,” Lioy told USA Today in 2011.

The results of laboratory analysis revealed the presence of elements including chromium, aluminum, barium, titanium, mercury and lead, as well as jet-fuel components and particles of wood, plastic, glass, asbestos and concrete.

The main aim of the research was to determine the nature of the cough that affected police officers, firefighters, construction workers, and Manhattan residents, a phenomenon later named “World Trade Center cough.”

“In the first 48 hours, the government was concerned about asbestos being the primary threat,” he said.

But Lioy found out that cough wasn’t caused by asbestos, pointing out there were several other culprits for the adverse health effects. A primary one was that cement dust was “very alkaline,” with pH levels above 10, irritating the linings of the lungs, Lioy claimed. He also found “fibers stuck in people’s upper airways,” trapping the cement particles and exacerbating the irritation.

Lioy published a book, entitled “Dust: The Inside Story of Its Role in the September 11th Aftermath,” and also conducted studies on oil spills, ozone pollution, and household pesticides.

He received two lifetime achievement awards — the Wesolowski Award from the International Society of Exposure Analysis and the Frank Chambers Award from the Air and Waste Management Association.

Read more: http://sputniknews.com/us/20150714/1024579519.html#ixzz3frfq3PpP

6 thoughts on “Scientist Who Analyzed Dust From 9/11 Attacks Dies Suddenly

  1. This is a lie… or this is a second scientist analyzing the dust, and being killed before he could tell the truth.

    The dust was originally analyzed by a UC Berkley chemistry professor named Stephen Jones (unless my memory fails me here), who found evidence of thermate, as well as nano-spheres of iron, which are only produced when steel is brought to it’s BOILING point. This provided more proof of the extreme temperatures that had to have been reached.

    The dust sample analysis was “smoking gun” proof of explosives being used to bring the towers down, and now we have this new bogus analysis, made by someone who’ll now never speak about it.

    BS …. in it’s entirety.

    1. The towers where nuked from 77 feet under them.
      That is why it is called Ground Zero.
      All the people that have died have died just like people from japan after the bombs where dropped.
      They can never put a building back on the same stops as the towers do to the holes below them from the nukes. This is why there are still holes where the towers where.
      The dust had items in it only found after a nuke goes off.

    2. I believe you’re thinking of Steven E. Jones, JR. He was/is? the Professor of Physics at BYU. I have his dvd.

        1. My reply was actually to JR. I saw the Dimitri video years ago. I have done some research on micro-nukes.

  2. “The results of laboratory analysis revealed the presence of elements including chromium, aluminum, barium, titanium, mercury and lead, as well as jet-fuel components and particles of wood, plastic, glass, asbestos and concrete.”

    This clown is full of sh#t. Jet fuel?

    No mention of the radioactivity.

    Zionist shill.

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