How to listen Project Description/Objectives Programs and Topics 2005-06 Professional Development Opportunities Instructional Materials/Resources How to listen
How to Listen THE TECH CLUB OUT-LOUD HER-STORY: THEN & NOW Powerful Signals HomeWAMC Northeast Public Radio Contact Us FAQ Feedback Instructional Materials/Resources Ideas for Using Radio StoriesSounds of Progress About Us

 

SYLVIA EARLE

Listen

(b. 1935) A DECADE AFTER NEIL ARMSTRONG TOOK THE FIRST STEPS ON THE MOON, SYLVIA EARLE EARNED THE TITLE 'HER DEEPNESS' BY DESCENDING 1250 FEET, TAKING OUR DEEPEST STEPS ON THE OCEAN FLOOR.

The request for proposals didn't say, 'men only', so thirty-four year old Sylvia Earle applied for the opportunity to live underwater for 6 weeks, conducting research with a team of 'aquanauts'. That was nineteen sixty nine, and the review board for the government's Tektite program could not imagine men and women working and living together in such close quarters. They turned her down, but made her the team leader for Tektite Two, a project for women researchers. These aquanauts, or 'aqua-babes' as they were known, received quite a bit of media attention. They performed groundbreaking work on the effects of pollution on coral reefs. The Tektite Two expedition prompted NASA to open its astronaut-training program to women. Suddenly, the world knew about Sylvia Earle. But by then Earle was already an accomplished scientist and adventurer. With a PhD. in marine botany, she had explored oceans around the world, studying aquatic life, and logging over one thousand hours of underwater research, all while raising two children.

Earle sunk to the lowest depths of her profession in nineteen seventy-nine...walking twelve hundred and fifty feet under water...deeper than anyone has ever gone. The dive earned her the title 'Her Deepness'. She went on to develop marine technologies like submersible Rovers, helping scientists reach greater depths than ever before. Using satellite images, maps, and photography, Earle produced the first atlas of Earth's oceans. In nineteen ninety one, Sylvia Earle took time off from her research to serve as Chief Scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. She returned to scientific work, but continues to be a voice for the world's oceans, educating the public on the importance of protecting the aqua sphere and the creatures that inhabit it.

Credits: Sylvia Earle photo is courtesy of the Sylvia Earle website.

For more information, please visit:
http://literati.net/Earle/
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/council/eir/bio_earle.html


Copyright WAMC 2005 All Rights Reserved
Terms of use


updated 12/05 by Wertheim

 

Search  
WWW Women In Science

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

 

 


 

.