DiscoverAsbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making
Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making
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Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making

Author: AsbestosPodcast.com

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They knew. They always knew.


Nearly 2,000 years ago, Roman historian Pliny the Elder documented asbestos workers dying from "sickness of the lungs"—watching slaves fashion crude respirators from animal bladders while weaving what he called "funeral dress for kings." The people closest to the dust understood the danger. The people farthest away admired the spectacle, collected the profits, and buried the evidence. That pattern never changed.


Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making traces humanity's 4,500-year relationship with the mineral the ancient Greeks named "asbestos"—meaning indestructible. From Stone Age Finnish pottery (2500 BCE) to the $70+ billion in legal damages paid by modern corporations, we uncover how a material praised for safety became a source of sickness, litigation, and grief.


Each episode explores:


  • Ancient origins: The salamander myth that persisted for 2,000 years, the Roman tablecloths that cleaned themselves in fire, the sacred flames kept burning with asbestos wicks


  • The industrial cover-up: Internal documents proving companies knew asbestos caused cancer since the 1930s—and suppressed the evidence for 40 years


  • Modern consequences: Why mesothelioma claims 3,000 American lives annually, and why $30+ billion sits in asbestos trust funds waiting for victims who never file


  • The science of denial: How manufactured doubt delayed regulation for decades, using the same tactics as the tobacco industry—sometimes with the same scientists


Whether you're a history enthusiast, legal professional, medical researcher, or someone seeking answers after asbestos exposure, this podcast reveals the uncomfortable truth: the longest-running industrial cover-up in human history isn't ancient history. It's still happening.


The History of Asbestos Podcast is sponsored by Danziger & De Llano, a nationwide mesothelioma law firm with over 30 years of experience and nearly $2 billion recovered for asbestos victims. 


If you or a loved one has mesothelioma, visit Dandell.com for a free consultation.

16 Episodes
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Episode 15: The Body Count Begins It's 1890 in Normandy, France. Paul Fleury recruits 17 cotton workers to process asbestos. Sixteen die—a 94% mortality rate that inspectors won't document for 16 years. Meanwhile, Lucy Deane, one of Britain's first female factory inspectors, examines asbestos dust under a microscope in 1898 and describes fibers as "sharp, glass-like, jagged." Her report identifies survivorship bias decades before the term exists. Dr. Montague Murray testifies about a carding ...
Episode 14: The Workers Nobody Counted Between 1880 and 1920, asbestos companies tracked production to the tenth of a pound but recorded zero occupational disease deaths. They documented every fatal accident with names and ages—but workers dying from breathing the product? Absent. The conspiracy doesn't start with what they knew. It starts with who they didn't count. Key Takeaways Quebec's 1919 Bureau of Mines recorded 12 fatal accidents by name but zero occupational asbestos deaths—deliberat...
Episode 13: The Magic Mineral Goes Mainstream How did asbestos go from industrial hazard to kitchen staple? By 1958, the U.S. Geological Survey counted over 3,000 applications—from ceiling tiles to cigarette filters delivering 131 million fibers per year into smokers' lungs. Building codes didn't just allow asbestos—they required it. This episode traces the 55-year gap between insurers flagging asbestos workers as uninsurable (1918) and peak U.S. consumption (803,000 metric tons in 1973). Key...
Episode 12: Raybestos and the Brake Pad Revolution Did the auto industry know brake dust was killing mechanics? By 1935, yes—and they agreed to stay quiet. On October 1, 1935, Raybestos president Sumner Simpson wrote to Johns-Manville: "I think the less said about asbestos, the better off we are." That silence lasted 50 years, excluded 900,000 brake workers from health studies, and left Connecticut playgrounds paved with asbestos waste. Key Takeaways 900,000 brake mechanics worked in the U.S....
Episode 11: The Corporate Architects Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making In 1898, a British government inspector described asbestos particles as "sharp, glass-like, jagged" and documented workers dying from lung disease. That same year, Henry Ward Johns—founder of America's largest asbestos company—died of his own product at age 40. Three years later, the Johns-Manville merger created an empire while public health warnings sat on file, ignored. In Episode 11 of Asbestos: A Conspi...
Episode 10: The Mines Open Arc 3: The Industrial Revolution — Premiere Episode How did a 'miracle fix' for deadly boiler explosions become a century-long catastrophe? In 1880, 159 boilers exploded in a single year—killing workers and bystanders with scalding steam and flying metal. Asbestos insulation solved the problem. But boiler explosions killed dozens per year. Asbestos would kill hundreds of thousands. The cure was worse than the disease—by orders of magnitude. Episode 10 marks the prem...
When did science finally kill the salamander myth? Not in 1646, when Thomas Browne published his famous debunking—the myth was already dead by then. Renaissance physicians had been burning salamanders and publishing the results since 1537. Browne's contribution was compiling evidence that was nearly a century old. The real question: why did it take 350 years for Marco Polo's explicit 1298 debunking to reach English scholars? This episode closes our three-part examination of the salamander leg...
Description In 1298, Marco Polo named his source: a Turkish mining supervisor called Zurficar who spent three years directing asbestos operations for Kublai Khan. There's just one problem — Zurficar appears in no Chinese, Persian, or Mongol records. He exists in 150 manuscript copies of one document and nowhere else. Episode 8 of Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making investigates why Marco Polo's detailed, accurate account of asbestos production stands virtually alone in the histor...
Episode Description In 1165, a forged letter invented an explanation for fireproof cloth that would dominate European belief for 500 years. The Letter of Prester John—supposedly from a mythical Christian king—claimed asbestos cloth was woven from salamander cocoons. It was propaganda. It was fake. And 469 surviving manuscripts prove it went medieval viral. In this episode:The Prester John Letter (c. 1165): A forged document invents the salamander-asbestos connection—469 surviving manuscripts...
Ancient writers described asbestos cloth in extraordinary detail—funeral shrouds for emperors, fire-cleaned napkins for Roman banquets, eternal lamp wicks for Greek temples. But when archaeologists search for physical evidence, they find almost nothing. The Mediterranean sources that documented asbestos obsessively left no artifacts behind. This is the paradox at the heart of ancient asbestos history. And it's the template for everything that comes after: evidence that should exist but ...
Episode Title: Episode 5: The Economics of Magic—What Fireproof Cloth Cost the Ancient World Episode Number: 5 Season: 1 Publish Date: December 22, 2025 Episode Description Medieval monks once paid a fortune for what they believed was the towel Jesus used at the Last Supper. The proof? It wouldn't burn. It was asbestos—a mineral worth more than pearls in the ancient world, and the foundation of a 4,000-year con. In Episode 5 of Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making, we follow th...
Did ancient Romans know asbestos was dangerous? The widely-cited "proof"—Pliny the Elder's passage about workers wearing bladder-skin masks—is a mistranslation. The passage appears in Natural History Book 33, Chapter 40, which discusses cinnabar (mercury sulfide) workers, not asbestos. Scholars Browne and Murray documented this correction in The Lancet in 1990, yet the myth persists in textbooks, litigation documents, and Wikipedia. This episode examines why ancient observers couldn't h...
Around 400 BCE, the sculptor Callimachus—nicknamed "katatêxitechnos" (the perfectionist) by the Athenians—created a golden lamp for the Erechtheion temple in Athens that burned continuously before the statue of Athena. The secret: an asbestos wick that never consumed itself. Oil refills were required only once per year. This is one of the earliest verified uses of asbestos technology, documented in the primary source account of Greek traveler Pausanias (c. 150 CE). In this episode, we examine...
Archaeological evidence from Finnish Neolithic sites pushes the first known human use of asbestos back to 4700–5000 BCE—nearly two thousand years earlier than commonly cited, and predating both the Egyptian pyramids and Stonehenge. In Episode 2 of Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making, we separate archaeological fact from historical myth—correcting widespread misconceptions about ancient asbestos while tracing its journey from Stone Age pottery to medieval legend. 5 Ancient Asbesto...
Between 1930 and 1980, asbestos was used in more than 4,000 consumer products—from the fake snow in “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) to toasters, hair dryers, crayons, ironing board covers, and Kent Micronite cigarette filters. Over 3,000 Americans are diagnosed with mesothelioma every year, and the exposed often don’t develop symptoms for 20 to 50 years after their first contact with the mineral. This season preview of Asbestos: A Conspiracy 4,500 Years in the Making maps the investigative journey ...
The North Tower of the World Trade Center stood for 102 minutes after impact. The South Tower collapsed in 56. One had asbestos fireproofing. One didn't. In 4,500 years of asbestos killing people, could September 11th be the one day it saved lives? That question opens this series—and this episode takes us back to where it all began. Roman historian Pliny the Elder documented asbestos workers dying from "sickness of the lungs" nearly 2,000 years ago, watching slaves fashion crude respirators...
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