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When: May 6, 2025 from 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Where: Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens’ Bosarge Family Education Center

PFAS—often called “forever chemicals”—are increasingly found in lakes, rivers, and streams across the country. These substances can enter surface waters from industrial sources, wastewater, landfills, and even rain. In this talk, we’ll explore where PFAS come from, how they move through the environment, and what we know about their presence in drinking water sources. We’ll also discuss what’s being done to monitor and reduce their impact.

Christoph Aeppli is a scientist at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, where he studies the environmental fate and transport of PFAS and other contaminants. His research focuses on how these chemicals move through and change in natural systems, including water, sediment, and organisms.

This lecture is the third in a three part series, From Forests to Faucets, brought to you by the Boothbay Region Clean Drinking Water Initiative. This series is free to the public. Participants do not need to attend all sessions (each session stands alone and participants can attend as many or few as they choose). Light refreshments will be served. For more information, please contact Bailey Charron at cleandrinkingwater@bbrlt.org