International Women's Day: who are the women two Blazing Paddles Paddlefest events are named for? - the Ruth Patrick Memorial and Rachel Carson Memorial
/When we established the Blazing Paddles Paddlefest, we decided to name two of our events (the 5.3-mile Ruth Patrick Memorial and the 13-mile Rachel Carson Memorial) after significant women who helped move the needle on the environmental movement. International Women’s Day gives us a perfect opportunity to shine a spotlight on these two pioneering women.
Dr. Ruth Patrick
(the following is wholly excerpted from the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University website)
In the book A to Z of Biologists, you'll find the entry on Dr. Ruth Patrick sandwiched between Louis Pasteur and Linus Pauling.
They are in good company. Dr. Patrick’s pioneering research, begun in the 1940s and dubbed the Patrick Principle, became the fundamental principle on which all environmental science and management is based. Dr. Patrick proved that biological diversity holds the key to understanding the environmental problems affecting an ecosystem.
Called “a den mother for generations of scientists,” and a “visionary ecologist,” Dr. Patrick grew as adept in the boardroom as in the lab. She filled the role of advisor, director, and trustee for corporations, governments, and nonprofits. For seven decades, she championed environmental protection, mentoring future scientists and inspiring many others by the example of her life and work. Learn more about Dr. Ruth Patrick by viewing her biography, list of positions and activities, honors and awards, and publications.
See what others have written about her:
BBC Radio 4 Reith Lectures:www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/reith2000/lecture2.shtml
A 2000 lecture by Dr. Tom Lovejoy, chief biodiversity advisor for the World Bank, pays homage to Dr. Patrick as a pioneer in biodiversity and environmental protection.Ecology Hall of Fame:ecotopia.org/ecology-hall-of-fame/ruth-patrick/
A personal note of appreciation by Don Weiss.The Heinz Awards web page on Ruth Patrick:www.heinzawards.net/recipients/ruth-patrick
Dr. Patrick received the Heinz Award in 2002.Villanova University's Mendel Medal Web page on Ruth Patrick:www1.villanova.edu/villanova/vpaa/mendelmedal/pastrecipients/ruth_patrick.html
Dr. Patrick received the Mendal Medal in 2002.WHYY (Philadelphia public television) Web page on Dr. Ruth Partick:www.whyy.org/tv12/RuthPatrick.html
Five digital video clips are available from this page.
Rachel Carson
(the following is wholly excerpted from “The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson” website
Perhaps the finest nature writer of the Twentieth Century, Rachel Carson (1907-1964) is remembered more today as the woman who challenged the notion that humans could obtain mastery over nature by chemicals, bombs and space travel than for her studies of ocean life. Her sensational book Silent Spring (1962) warned of the dangers to all natural systems from the misuse of chemical pesticides such as DDT, and questioned the scope and direction of modern science, initiated the contemporary environmental movement.
Carson was a student of nature, a born ecologist before that science was defined, and a writer who found that the natural world gave her something to write about. Born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, upstream from the industrial behemoth of Pittsburgh, she became a marine scientist working for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Washington, DC, primarily as a writer and editor. She was always aware of the impact that humans had on the natural world. Her first book, Under the Sea-Wind (1941) was a gripping account of the interactions of a sea bird, a fish and an eel -- who shared life in the open seas. A canny scholar working in government during World War II, Carson took advantage of the latest scientific material for her next book, The Sea Around Us (1951) which was nothing short of a biography of the sea. It became an international best-seller, raised the consciousness of a generation, and made Rachel Carson the trusted public voice of science in America. The Edge of the Sea (1955) brought Carson’s focus on the ecosystems of the eastern coast from Maine to Florida. All three books were physical explanations of life, all drenched with miracle of what happens to life in and near the sea.
In her books on the sea Carson wrote about geologic discoveries from submarine technology and underwater research -- of how islands were formed, how currents change and merge, how temperature affects sea life, and how erosion impacts not just shore lines but salinity, fish populations, and tiny micro-organisms. Even in the 1950's, Carson’s ecological vision of the oceans shows her embrace of a larger environmental ethic which could lead to the sustainability of nature’s interactive and interdependent systems. Climate change, rising sea-levels, melting Arctic glaciers, collapsing bird and animal populations, crumbling geological faults -- all are part of Carson’s work. But how, she wondered, would the educated public be kept informed of these challenges to life itself? What was the public's "right to know"?
Evidence of the widespread misuse of organic chemical pesticides government and industry after World War II prompted Carson to reluctantly speak out not just about the immediate threat to humans and non-human nature from unwitting chemical exposure, but also to question government and private science's assumption that human domination of nature was the correct course for the future. In Silent Spring Carson asked the hard questions about whether and why humans had the right to control nature; to decide who lives or dies, to poison or to destroy non-human life. In showing that all biological systems were dynamic and by urging the public to question authority, to ask "who speaks, and why"? Rachel Carson became a social revolutionary, and Silent Spring became the handbook for the future of all life on Earth.