Visualizing Pollution: Representations of Biological Data in Water Pollution Control in the United States, 1948–1962

Author:

Hearty Ryan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of History of Science and Technology Johns Hopkins University

Abstract

AbstractAfter the United States Congress passed the Water Pollution Control Act of 1948, biologists played an increasingly significant role in scientific studies of water pollution. Biologists interacted with other experts, notably engineers, who managed the public agencies devoted to water pollution control. Although biologists were at first marginalized within these agencies, the situation began to change by the early 1960s. Biological data became an integral part of water pollution control. While changing societal values, stimulated by an emerging ecological awareness, may explain broader shifts in expert opinion during the 1960s, this article explores how graphs changed experts’ perceptions of water pollution. Experts communicated with each other via reports, journal articles, and conference speeches. Those sources reveal that biologists began experimenting with new graphical methods to simplify the complex ecological data they collected from the field. Biologists, I argue, followed the engineers’ lead by developing graphical methods that were concise and quantitative. Their need to collaborate with engineers forced them to communicate, negotiate, and overcome conflicts and misunderstandings. By meeting engineers’ expectations and promoting the value of their data through images as much as words, biologists asserted their authority within water pollution control by the early 1960s.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,History

Reference50 articles.

1. Bartsch Alfred Frank “Biological Aspects of Stream Pollution ”Sewage Works Journal20 no. 2 (1948): 292–302.

2. Beck William M. Jr. “Studies in Stream Pollution Biology: I. A Simplified Ecological Classification of Organisms.”Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences17 no. 4 (1954): 211–227.

3. Beck William M. Jr. “Suggested Method for Reporting Biotic Data ”Sewage and Industrial Wastes27 no. 10 (1955): 1193–1197.

4. Black Hayse H. and Gerald N. McDermott “Industrial Waste Guide: Blast Furnace Department of the Steel Industry ”Sewage and Industrial Wastes26 no. 8 (1954): 976–990.

5. Burlington Roy F. “Quantitative Biological Assessment of Pollution ”Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)34 no. 2 (1962): 179–183.

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