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<div style="direction: ltr;font-family: Tahoma;color: #000000;font-size: 10pt;">Colleagues,<br>
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<p class="MsoNormal">Please mark your calendars for the OSU Libraries and Press's next Resident Scholar lecture, which will be presented by Joshua McGuffie on Tuesday, October 7<sup>th</sup> at 2:00 PM. The talk will take place in the Valley Library's Willamette
East seminar room. McGuffie is a M.A. candidate in the History of Science and Graduate Teaching Assistant in OSU’s School of History, Philosophy and Religion. His presentation is titled “A Landscape Up for Grabs: How Hanford’s Environmental Scientists Recreated
Nature at the United States’ Most Polluted Place.” </p>
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<p class="MsoNormal">An abstract is included below. <br>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><i><span style="font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Trebuchet MS","sans-serif"">In the 1960s and 1970s, environmental scientists at the Atomic Energy Commission’s (AEC) Hanford Site in Washington State took on a decisive role in determining
the site’s mission and future. They did so amid an identity crisis at Hanford. By 1972 all the original plutonium production reactors had been shut down. Once the flagship of the AEC’s defense-related plutonium production line, Hanford no longer had a core
mission. In the ensuing search for purpose, the environmental scientists at Hanford’s Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) began to define a mission for the site through their research. In 1968, they launched the Arid Lands Ecology (ALE) Reserve, a 120-square-mile
sequestered natural area on the site’s western boundary. ALE Reserve became the nexus of PNL’s involvement in the International Biological Program (IBP). In their work for the IBP, the environmental scientists began to study the land and its ecosystems in
their own right, rather than in relation to the nuclear establishment at Hanford. Through their research, they eventually came to see ALE Reserve as a pristine landscape that preserved native flora and fauna. They worked to not just study the reserve, but
to ensure its preservation as a constitutive part of Hanford. In 1999, ALE Reserve became part of Hanford Reach National Monument. The values and virtues first annunciated by the environmental scientists in the ‘60s and ‘70s evolved into the creation narrative
for the national monument. In this way, the scientists used their research to create a pristine landscape right next to the nation’s most polluted place.</span></i><i><span style="font-size:10.0pt"></span></i></p>
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We hope to see you there!<br>
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Regards,<br>
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Larry Landis<br>
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<div class="PlainText">Lawrence A. Landis<br>
Director, Special Collections & Archives Research Center<br>
OSU Libraries and Press<br>
121 The Valley Library<br>
Corvallis, OR 97331-4501<br>
541-737-0540<br>
larry.landis@oregonstate.edu</div>
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