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In A Science on the Scales, Jennifer M. Hubbard tells the story of how a new and emerging science - marine and fisheries biology - became an important enterprise in Canada. She uses extensive archival research - focussed on scientific correspondence and internal reports - and follows the science's development in Canada, as well as Scandinavia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In so doing, Hubbard describes the important, but fraught, relationship between the economic and social history of Atlantic Canada and its relations with the federal government, particularly in the context of the generally low priority given fisheries issues.Despite a variety of challenges, contributions made by the research organization that eventually became the Fisheries Research Board of Canada proved to be vital in the development of the science. Indeed, its flagship station, the Atlantic Biological Station in New Brunswick, became for a time one of the world's leading centres for marine science, its dynamic scientists and facilities providing the impetus that helped Canadian fisheries biology to achieve internationally recognized status. An original and timely work, A Science on the Scales shines a light on a heretofore-neglected aspect of Canada's science history.
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2006-01-21
Mått160 x 238 x 35 mm
Vikt700 g
FormatInbunden
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor300
FörlagUniversity of Toronto Press
ISBN9780802088598
UtmärkelserWinner of John Lyman Book Award for Canadian - Naval and Maritime History 2006 (Canada)
Jennifer Hubbard is an associate professor in the Department of History at Ryerson University.
Acknowledgments Introduction Scientists at Sea: Expeditions and Seaside Stations Fishing for Ideas: Approaches to Marine Biology and Fisheries Science to 1914 The Canadian Fisheries Expedition, 1914–1915Ottawa, 1919: Bureaucrats versus the Biological BoardRescuing Canada’s Sinking Atlantic Fishing Industry, 1924–1939Huxley’s Red Herring An Environmental Assessment: The International Passamaquoddy Fisheries Commission, 1931–1933 Ebb Tide at the Atlantic Biological StationEpilogue: Balancing the ScalesNotes BibliographyIndex