WEBVTT 00:00:06.841 --> 00:00:09.871 In 1958, Rachel Carson received a letter 00:00:09.871 --> 00:00:13.280 describing songbirds suddenly dropping from tree branches. 00:00:13.280 --> 00:00:16.920 The writer blamed their deaths on a pesticide called DDT 00:00:16.920 --> 00:00:19.920 that exterminators had sprayed on a nearby marsh. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:19.920 --> 00:00:23.660 The letter was the push Carson needed to investigate DDT. 00:00:23.660 --> 00:00:27.700 She had already heard from scientists and conservationists who were worried 00:00:27.700 --> 00:00:32.232 that rampant use of the pesticide posed a threat to fish, birds, 00:00:32.232 --> 00:00:33.862 and possibly humans. 00:00:33.862 --> 00:00:36.920 She began to make inquiries through government contacts 00:00:36.920 --> 00:00:40.356 from her years working in the United States Bureau of Fisheries. 00:00:40.356 --> 00:00:45.501 She asked: “what has already silenced the voices of spring?” NOTE Paragraph 00:00:45.501 --> 00:00:50.784 In 1962, Carson published her findings in "Silent Spring." 00:00:50.784 --> 00:00:53.514 Her book documented the misuse of chemicals 00:00:53.514 --> 00:00:56.374 and their toll on nature and human health. 00:00:56.374 --> 00:01:01.337 "Silent Spring" immediately drew both applause and impassioned dissent— 00:01:01.337 --> 00:01:04.247 along with vicious personal attacks on the author. 00:01:04.247 --> 00:01:10.123 How did this mild-mannered biologist and writer ignite such controversy? NOTE Paragraph 00:01:10.123 --> 00:01:13.773 Carson began her career as a hardworking graduate student, 00:01:13.773 --> 00:01:17.584 balancing her studies in biology at John Hopkins University 00:01:17.584 --> 00:01:18.934 with part time jobs. 00:01:18.934 --> 00:01:22.204 Still, she had to leave school before completing her doctorate 00:01:22.204 --> 00:01:25.274 to provide for her ailing father and sister. 00:01:25.274 --> 00:01:28.314 Carson found part time work with the Bureau of Fisheries 00:01:28.314 --> 00:01:31.964 writing for a radio program on marine biology. 00:01:31.964 --> 00:01:36.054 Her ability to write materials that could hold the general public’s attention 00:01:36.054 --> 00:01:39.314 impressed her superiors, and in 1936, 00:01:39.314 --> 00:01:43.354 she became the second woman to be hired at the Bureau full time. 00:01:43.354 --> 00:01:47.769 In 1941, she published the first of three books on the ocean, 00:01:47.769 --> 00:01:52.165 combining science with lyrical meditations on underwater worlds. 00:01:52.165 --> 00:01:56.514 These explorations resonated with a wide audience. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:56.514 --> 00:01:59.482 In "Silent Spring," Carson turned her attention 00:01:59.482 --> 00:02:03.824 to the ways human actions threaten the balance of nature. 00:02:03.824 --> 00:02:08.980 DDT was originally used during World War II to shield crops from insects 00:02:08.980 --> 00:02:12.490 and protect soldiers from insect-borne diseases. 00:02:12.490 --> 00:02:17.337 After the war, it was routinely sprayed in wide swaths to fight pests, 00:02:17.337 --> 00:02:19.647 often with unforeseen results. 00:02:19.647 --> 00:02:22.886 One attempt to eradicate fire ants in the southern U.S. 00:02:22.886 --> 00:02:29.060 killed wildlife indiscriminately, but did little to eliminate the ants. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:29.060 --> 00:02:33.170 In spite of this and other mishaps, the US Department of Agriculture 00:02:33.170 --> 00:02:37.096 and chemical companies extolled the benefits of DDT. 00:02:37.096 --> 00:02:41.170 There was little regulation or public awareness about its potential harm. 00:02:41.170 --> 00:02:44.394 But Carson showed how the overuse of chemicals 00:02:44.394 --> 00:02:47.416 led to the evolution of resistant species— 00:02:47.416 --> 00:02:51.746 which, in turn, encouraged the development of deadlier chemicals. 00:02:51.746 --> 00:02:54.330 Since DDT does not dissolve in water, 00:02:54.330 --> 00:02:58.802 she asserted that over time it would accumulate in the environment, 00:02:58.802 --> 00:03:03.101 the bodies of insects, the tissues of animals who consume those insects, 00:03:03.101 --> 00:03:04.841 and eventually humans. 00:03:04.841 --> 00:03:09.907 She suggested that exposure to DDT might alter the structure of genes, 00:03:09.907 --> 00:03:13.727 with unknown consequences for future generations. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:13.727 --> 00:03:17.172 The response to "Silent Spring" was explosive. 00:03:17.172 --> 00:03:20.542 For many people the book was a call to regulate substances 00:03:20.542 --> 00:03:22.942 capable of catastrophic harm. 00:03:22.942 --> 00:03:26.802 Others objected that Carson hadn’t mentioned DDT’s role 00:03:26.802 --> 00:03:30.432 controlling the threat insects posed to human health. 00:03:30.432 --> 00:03:35.285 Former Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson demanded to know 00:03:35.285 --> 00:03:40.497 “why a spinster with no children was so concerned about genetics?” 00:03:40.497 --> 00:03:44.767 and dismissed Carson as “probably a Communist.” 00:03:44.767 --> 00:03:49.796 A lawyer for a pesticide manufacturer alluded to Carson and her supporters 00:03:49.796 --> 00:03:55.579 as “sinister influences” aiming to paint businesses as “immoral.” NOTE Paragraph 00:03:55.579 --> 00:03:59.099 In reality, Carson had focused on the dangers of chemicals 00:03:59.099 --> 00:04:03.602 because they weren’t widely understood, while the merits were well publicized. 00:04:03.602 --> 00:04:06.008 She rejected the prevailing belief that humans 00:04:06.008 --> 00:04:08.736 should and could control nature. 00:04:08.736 --> 00:04:11.536 Instead, she challenged people to cultivate 00:04:11.536 --> 00:04:16.686 “maturity and mastery, not of nature, but of ourselves.” NOTE Paragraph 00:04:16.686 --> 00:04:20.216 Carson died of cancer in 1964, 00:04:20.216 --> 00:04:23.906 only two years after the publication of "Silent Spring." 00:04:23.906 --> 00:04:28.584 Her work galvanized a generation of environmental activists. 00:04:28.584 --> 00:04:32.324 In 1969, under pressure from environmentalists, 00:04:32.324 --> 00:04:36.046 Congress passed the National Environmental Policy Act 00:04:36.046 --> 00:04:41.559 that required federal agencies to evaluate environmental impacts of their actions. 00:04:41.559 --> 00:04:42.989 To enforce the act, 00:04:42.989 --> 00:04:47.216 President Richard Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency. 00:04:47.216 --> 00:04:53.566 And in 1972, the EPA issued a partial ban on the use of DDT. 00:04:53.566 --> 00:04:58.254 Long after her death, Rachel Carson continued to advocate for nature 00:04:58.254 --> 00:05:00.934 through the lingering impact of her writing.