Silent Planet Essay

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    The atomic bomb of pesticides, the toxic compound you may or may not consider on a day to day basis. What is this compound? It is Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, otherwise known as DDT, which is its abbreviation. This white and odorless compound, consisting of benzene, chlorine, and alcohol , was banned in the June of 1972. The use of DDT was forbidden due to its immense risk to the life of the human race, flora and fauna (plants and animals), and most importantly, the world. The long hearings that

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    The dominant theme of Silent Spring by Rachel Carson is the powerful and detrimental impact humans have on the natural world. Carson 's main argument is that pesticides have harmful effects on the environment and lead to a loss of biodiversity and quality of life. Carson uses the pesticide DDT throughout the book as she examines the effects of pesticides throughout the United States. Though the majority of the book is focused on the effects of pesticides on our ecosystem processes, she also touches

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    in an attempt to control pests detrimental to their crops. Rachel Carson was a biologist who wrote pamphlets (Lear) on conservation and natural resources designed to inform people on the beauty of the living world. In an excerpt from her 1962 work Silent Spring, Carson calls upon the public to take action against the use of parathion by highlighting its catastrophic nature and vilifying the agricultural community for their negligence. Carson emphasizes the hazards of parathion by exposing its fatal

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    But it’s still home there. You wait and see. When the first bomb drops on America the people up here’ll start thinking. They haven't been here long enough. A couple years is all… they’ve got relatives down there, and their hometowns.” (132). In “The Silent Towns”, Walter Gripp realizes that all the settlers have flocked back to Earth. When Gripp figures out that everyone has left Mars, he’s ecstatic at first. Later, he desperately is looking for some other soul on Mars; preferably a woman. He does find

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    been filled with stars, an entire galaxy filled with planets all around, all condensed, all focused on one part of said galaxy… That part of the galaxy, involved the 8 planets circling around what we call, the sun. In the dream, however. The entire galaxy was still, seemingly lifeless, as if something higher than them had demanded their eternal obeisance, all of their focus...all of their everything. Slowly, ever so slowly, the stars, the planets, the comets...everything. Everything was being drained

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    It is considered that the modern environmental movement was set off by Rachel Carson and her private research. Published in 1926, the controversial book of the year, "Silent Spring" associated the pesticide use with the harm towards the health of all living things, humans included. This claim generated investigations into the safety of pesticide use, thus changing the legislation, restricting or banning certain chemicals and triggering attacks from the chemical and agricultural industries. One of

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    Silent Spring Essay

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    Silent Spring Rachel Louise Carson (1907-64), was an American marine biologist, and author of widely read books on ecological themes. Carson was born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, and educated at the former Pennsylvania College for Women and Johns Hopkins University. Rachel Carson taught Zoology at the University of Maryland from 1931 to 1936. She was an aquatic biologist at the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries and its successor, the Fish and Wildlife Service, from 1936 to 1952. Rachel Carson wrote 4 books

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    in an attempt to control pests detrimental to their crops. Rachel Carson was a biologist who wrote pamphlets (Lear) on conservation and natural resources designed to inform people on the beauty of the living world. In an excerpt from her 1962 work Silent Spring, Carson calls upon the public to take action against the use of parathion by highlighting its catastrophic nature and vilifying the agricultural community for their negligence. Carson emphasizes the hazards of parathion by exposing its fatal

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    ‘SILENT SPRING’ – A BOOK REVIEW By Pratikshya Mahapatra (pm2535) “Pen is mightier than sword”- I think we all are aware of these famous words coined by Edward Bulwer-Lytton. Rachael Carson’s Silent Spring totally justifies the purpose of the metaphor word by word. Although they always get the critical judgments and are less celebrated, books sometimes bear the most significant role in changing the social atmosphere. Rachael Carson’s Silent Spring, which was published on 1962, exposed the potential

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    research being done to answer these questions has taken place in what we call “outer space.” New technology has allowed us to study galaxies and stars which are vast distances from us. What we have also discovered is that there are many more “earthlike” planets than originally believed, and more being discovered all the time. As each new discovery is made, one of the oldest of these important questions arises again and again. Are we alone in the universe, or is there life somewhere out there? While this

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