biography
| name: |
Carson, Rachel (Louise)
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| sex:
| female
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| lived:
| (1907–64)
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| biography:
| Marine biologist, environmentalist, and writer, born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, USA. She grew up on a Pennsylvania farm, graduated from the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham College) in 1929, and went on to further studies at Johns Hopkins University. She taught at the University of Maryland for five years before joining the US Fish and Wildlife Service (1936). Her first book, Under the Sea-Wind (1941) described marine life in clear, elegant, and non-technical prose. She retained her government job through the 1940s, in part to help support her mother and her sister's two orphaned daughters. In 1951 she published The Sea Around Us, which became an immediate best-seller and freed her from financial worry. During the 1950s she conducted research into the effects of pesticides on the food chain, published in her most influential work, Silent Spring (1962), which condemned the indiscriminate use of pesticides, especially DDT (later banned). The book led to a presidential commission that largely endorsed her findings, and helped shape a growing environmental consciousness. |
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