The Sound Canadian Research Behind Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring

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Silent Spring, Book of the Month Club Edition
Silent Spring, Book of the Month Club Edition

Originally posted on www.activehistory.ca

September 2012 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring. In this influential book, Carson argued exhaustively that the indiscriminate use of chemical pesticides such as DDT for industrial and agricultural purposes was detrimental to ecosystems and human health. Generally well received by the public, Silent Spring helped fuel the development of modern environmentalism around the world in the 1960s and 1970s. This growth in environmental awareness subsequently compelled various governments, among other things, to put in place regulatory frameworks for the use of pesticides and to even ban certain kinds, including DDT.

However, the book also had its detractors. The United States chemical industry, for example, waged an aggressive campaign to discredit Carson’s work in the 1960s. More recently, different individuals and organizations with pro-free market and anti-regulation inclinations have launched a revisionist attack against Carson’s legacy. As historians of science and technology Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway point out in their book, “free marketers realized that if you could convince people that an example of successful government regulation [e.g., the ban on DDT] wasn’t, in fact, successful–that it was actually a mistake–you could strengthen the argument against regulation in general.”[1] One of the main criticisms offered by the anti-Carson crowd is that Silent Spring was not based on “sound” science, which can be interpreted in two main ways: either Carson relied on scientific studies that were inaccurate, or else her research gathering process was not very meticulous.

My own research on the exchange of scientific knowledge between Carson and several scientists in the province of New Brunswick, Canada, from 1958 to 1961 strongly supports the notion that the former interpretation is incorrect (some of this research has already been published in the journal Acadiensis). New Brunswick was the site of a massive DDT aerial spraying program to control the eastern spruce budworm in the 1950s and 1960s. During this period, the province was also the home of renowned scientists who were conducting pre- and post-spray research on species commonly used as ecological indices: fish, birds, and insects. The ecological data generated by these scientists were crucial for parts of Carson’s case in Silent Spring, and their findings were later backed up by numerous other studies in the 1960s and 1970s. For example, two New Brunswick biologists with the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, C.J. Kerswill and P.F. Elson, were the first scientists to demonstrate the harmful effects of DDT on Atlantic salmon in a large river watershed. Their studies, plus those of their colleagues, formed the scientific foundation of the first quarter of Carson’s ninth chapter, titled “Rivers of Death.”

With regards to the meticulousness of Carson’s research, a revealing piece of historical evidence is a letter she wrote to Kerswill about the illustration at the beginning of her ninth chapter. Kerswill was an invaluable source of information and a good counsellor on matters of fish and water ecologies for Carson, which earned him special thanks in the list of acknowledgements at the front of her book. In one particular January 1962 letter to Kerswill, Carson wrote:

I have one further question for you if I may impose on you again, but I am not sure where else I could have it answered accurately. It relates to a drawing that is being prepared for my book and the question is whether young salmon in the parr stage [more than a year old, but still live in freshwater] would rise to the surface and take hatchling Mayflies? I know that they feed on the bottom-dwelling larvae of aquatic insects, but I was not sure whether perhaps towards the latter part of their stream life they might also become surface feeders as my artist has shown them in a preliminary sketch. If this is inaccurate he can simply represent older salmon instead.[2]

Undoubtedly, that sort of attention to detail was the work of someone who wanted to ensure that her book was based on “sound” science. Thus, as we reflect on the 50-year legacy ofSilent Spring, it is important that we do so in an intellectually honest manner. Those who would falsely criticize Carson’s work for political gain must not be allowed to revise the historical record. The reality is that she spent many months gathering the most up-to-date and concrete scientific knowledge available for Silent Spring (most of which was later backed up by other scientific studies), and the world and those species that live on it (humans included) are better off today because of the work Carson completed half a century ago.

Mark J. McLaughlin is a PhD candidate at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton.

  • [1] Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway, Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2010), 217. Oreskes and Conway do an excellent job of debunking most false criticisms of Silent Spring in chapter seven of their book.
  • [2] Rachel Carson to C.J. Kerswill, 23 January 1962, Rachel Carson Papers, YCAL MSS 46, box 43, folder 789, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University Library.

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I am an Assistant Professor of History and Canadian Studies, a cross-appointment with the Department of History and the Canadian-American Center at the University of Maine in Orono. I have research interests in the history of forestry, resource management and science, modern environmentalism, and government comics in Canada.

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