In this episode I speak with Sam Rosolina, an environmental chemist currently serving as Vice President of Applied Innovation at Microbial Insights, a laboratory that uses microbes to clean up environmental contamination. We discuss:
• How growing up in rural Northeast Tennessee shaped his love of nature.
• How witnessing the devastating 2008 Kingston coal ash spill motivated his pursuit of environmental chemistry research.
• His path from academic heavy metal detection to leading isotope analysis at Microbial Insights, tracking microbial breakdown of contaminants.
• The compelling parallels between microbial and human communities, particularly in their reliance on specialization and mutual support.
• His perspective on the balance between voluntary and compliance-driven environmental action, noting regulation's historic role in driving improvements.
• How finding stability in place and career has enabled broader thinking about research while maintaining deep regional connections.
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