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- Rachel Carson's
- account of the
- hidden hazards of
- pesticides inspired
- a generation of
- environmentalists.
- She evoked a
- vision of a 'silent
- spring' without
- birdsong: all the
- birds were dead
- #
- Carson trained as
- a marine biologist
- and before she
- uncovered the
- horrors of toxic
- damage, she was
- best known for
- her books about
- the sea. The
- Sea Around Us,
- reminded the
- world how much
- of our own planet
- remains as obscure
- and unexplored as
- outer space
- #
- In the final part of
- her marine trilogy,
- The Edge of the
- Sea, Carson
- examined life on
- the seashore, the
- border zone
- between the
- marine world and
- man's dry habitat.
- As in her other
- works, the main
- theme was the
- fragility of wild-
- life environments
- #
- In 1962, Carson
- published Silent
- Spring, which
- castigated the
- American author-
- ities for the
- harm its citizens
- were suffering
- through pesticides
- in general, and
- DDT in particular.
- The book became a
- bestseller and set
- alarm bells
- ringing across
- the country
- #
- After Silent Spring
- was published,
- traces of arsenic
- that had found
- their way into the
- food chain, were
- found in meat in
- America. It trig
- gered immediate
- government action
- to control pesti-
- cides. Carson
- died during the
- Senate hearings
- #
- Six years after
- Carson's death a
- new book, Since
- Silent Spring,
- was written to
- commemorate her
- achievements. The
- British had moved
- more quickly than
- the Americans in
- limiting the use of
- DDT, but the battle
- was far from won
- #
- The dangers of
- toxic chemical
- waste are taken
- seriously by the
- authorities.
- Although some
- dangers remain,
- most people now
- take safety
- precautions for
- granted. But if it
- were not for the
- pioneering work of
- Rachel Carson our
- awareness may
- have come
- much later
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