HISTORY This Week: The Sky Is Falling
History Channel podcast features Institute’s oral history interview with Nobel laureate and ozone savior Mario Molina.
The Science History Institute’s oral history interview with Nobel Prize-winning scientist Mario Molina (pictured left) was featured in HISTORY This Week, a podcast series produced by HISTORY (formerly the History Channel). The episode features excerpts from his 2013 interview and reveals how the Mexican chemist “contributed to our salvation from a global environmental problem that could have catastrophic consequences.”
Molina was the first to notice that chlorofluorocarbons—better known as CFCs—had the potential of destroying the Earth’s protective ozone layer. He shared the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with his mentor, Frank Sherwood Rowland, and Dutch scientist Paul Crutzen.
Listen to the oral history interview >>
Above: Mario Molina (left) and Frank Sherwood Rowland at UC Irvine, January 1975. University of California, Irvine
More News
Explore the History of Science on the School Food Tray with Institute’s New ‘Lunchtime’ Exhibition Opening September 27
Visitors will uncover the surprising story behind the school lunch.
Science History Institute Hosts 2024 Gordon Cain Conference
“Storytelling as Pedagogy” program explored using scientific biographies in the classroom and beyond.
Science History Institute Welcomes 2024–2025 Beckman Center Fellows
Our scholars study a wide range of topics in the history and social studies of chemistry, chemical engineering, and the life sciences.