Era of Earth Day

Earth, Wind, and Fire

Population

1950s: control population to protect wilderness, nature

Sierra Club supports population control, 1965

David Brower asks Paul Ehrlich to write book

  Stanford biology professor

  The Population Bomb, 1967

  3 million copies: Doom!

Water Pollution Disasters

 Torrey Canyon, 1967

­ First supertanker spill

Santa Barbara Oil Spill

Oil well blowout, Santa Barbara Channel, 1969

  235,000 gal. over coastline, 800 sq.mi. of ocean

  Kills 1000s of birds & animals, several grey whales

 

 

A River Burns!

Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River fire, 1969

Environmental controversies

Alaska pipeline, 1969-1973

Supersonic Transport (SST), 1969-1971

Everglades Jetport, 1969

Cross Florida Barge Canal, 1969-1971

 

 

 

 

 

Skyrocketing  membership

National Wildlife Federation: largest, richest

  1970: 30% hunters; 20% opposed to all hunting

National Audubon Society

  1965–75: 8X growth; PR & glossy magazine

Sierra Club: Most influential & best-known

  David Brower steers club to national prominence

  Sierra Club Books: Ansel Adams & Eliot Porter

  $10 million total sales by 1969

  Couldn’t delegate, overspent, ignored directors, lost tax-exempt status which hurt large contributions

  Ousted 1969

  Founded Friends of the Earth, John Muir Institute for Environmental Studies, & Earth Island Institute

 

 

 

A New Ecological Awareness

Focus changes from human needs to nature

Back to nature

  No plastics or chemicals

  Natural foods, natural fibers, natural products

  New edition of Nearings’ Living the Good Life, 1970

  New “Waldens”: the rural commune movement

  Explosion of backpacking, camping, outdoor activities

Thinking Ecologically

Living responsibly

  René Dubos: “Think globally; act locally”

Recycling centers established

Energy-efficient houses

Buying gas-efficient automobiles

  Back to the bicycle

  Bringing back public transportation

  Amtrak, 1970

Technology for the people

  Whole Earth Catalog

  The personal computer