Answer: DDT
DDT is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 142 times.
- Banned pesticide
- C14H9Cl5, familiarly
- C14H9Cl5
- Bug killer, briefly
- "Silent Spring" topic
- Insect killer
- "Silent Spring" subject
- Danger in the water supply
- Old agricultural letters
- Banned insecticide
- Chloral derivative, for short
- One target of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring"
- Banned bug spray
- Banned spray
- Toxic spray
- "Silent Spring" subj.
- "Silent Spring" killer
- Insecticide banned by the U.S. in 1973
- Banned bug killer
- Killer banned in 1973
- Banned substance
- Infamous insecticide
- Malathion alternative
- Banned mosquito control agent
- Banned bug bane
- Target of a 1972 ban
- 1970s EPA concern
- Banned agrochemical
- Chemical used to fight malaria
- Subj. of the book "Silent Spring"
- Pesticide banned by the EPA
- The WHO used it to fight malaria
- EPA-banned pesticide
- Malaria stopper
- Pesticide banned by the EPA in 1972
- Banned insecticide: Abbr.
- Banned insecticide, briefly
- Carson subject
- Banned insecticide, for short
- ''Silent Spring'' subject
- Prohibited bug spray
- Banned insecticide letters
- Outlawed insecticide
- Strong pesticide
- Banned insecticide (Abbr.)
- Insecticide letters
- Banned chemical
- Outlawed pesticide
- Eco hazard
- Insecticide banned since 1972
- Insecticide banned in 1972
- WWII spray
- Bug killer banned by the EPA
- The EPA banned it in 1972
- Bug-killing ecohazard, briefly
- Banned insect control agent
- Environmentally destructive pesticide
- WWII-era malaria controller
- Another banned chemical
- EPA-banned bug killer
- It's been banned in the U.S. since 1972
- Controversial pesticide (Abbr.)
- Insecticide banned by the EPA
- Taboo spray
- WWII insecticide
- Target of a 1972 ban in the U.S.
- Outlawed killer
- Notorious insecticide
- Outlawed spray
- Banned pesticide, abbr.
- Banned bug-killer
- Erstwhile pesticide
- Subj. of the 1948 Nobel in Physiology or Medicine
- Potent pesticide
- Old insecticide
- Pesticide letters
- Bug spray abbr.
- Insecticide abbr.
- Bug-spray letters
- Insecticide
- Bug killer
- Bug spray
- Insecticide, for short
- Bygone pesticide
- Banned insecticide's letters
- Insecticide whose spelled-out name has 31 letters
- Insecticide spelled-out name has 31 letters
- "Silent Spring" toxin
- Taboo spray's letters
- Its disappearance aided bald eagles
- Banned pesticide: Abbr.
- Banned organochloride
- E.P.A.-banned substance
- Toxic spray banned by the EPA
- Bane in Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi"
- Now-banned pesticide that decimated the bald eagle population
- Danger in the water supply, once
- Chemical restricted by the Stockholm Convention
- Malaria-fighting compound during W.W. II
- Prohibited insecticide
- Antimalarial agent
- Banned crop spray
- Outlawed pesticide, for short
- "Silent Spring" topic, for short
- "Silent Spring" pesticide
- Dangerous '50s crop spray
- "Silent Spring" topic, in brief
- Old crop spray
- Pesticide banned in 1972
- What the EPA banned in 1972
- E.P.A.-banned pesticide
- Prohibited pesticide
- Acronym for a banned insecticide
- "Silent Spring" spray
- Bug spray no more
- '50s crop spray
- Environmental no-no
- EPA concern of the 1970s
- Banished bug spray
- Pesticide banned in the '70s
- What Ms. Carson criticized
- Pesticide banned in '72
- Debugging aid?
- Banned hydrocarbon
- EPA-banned pesticide since 1972
- Early EPA concern
- Substance whose primary use earned its discoverer the 1948 Nobel Prize in Physiology - but is now banned
- "Silent Spring" subject, for short
- Insecticide whose 1972 ban led to the comeback of the bald eagle
- One of the Stockholm Convention's "dirty dozen" (2001)
- EPA-banned insecticide
- What Carson warned about
- What Rachel Carson wanted banned
- Erstwhile controller of Dutch elm disease
- Banned pesticide, for short
- Noted organochloride, in brief
- Rachel Carson subject
- Subj. of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring"
- Banned compound once used to control malaria
- Banned antimalarial
- Substance banned for agricultural use in 1972, for short
- Rachel Carson subj.