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redqueen

(115,103 posts)
Thu Jul 17, 2014, 05:52 PM Jul 2014

Dr. Katsuko Saruhashi

Dr. Katsuko Saruhashi was a Japanese geochemist who studied both the effects of carbon dioxide on seawater and the dangers of radioactive debris from nuclear testing. Her measurements of carbon dioxide levels in seawater were some of the first ever made. She was also one of the first researchers to show that the effects of radioactive fallout from nuclear bomb testing will spread far outside of the orginal test site. She was committed to supporting and promoting women in science.

Dr. Katsuko Saruhashi was born on March 22, 1920 in Tokyo, Japan. She attended Toho University (then known as the Imperial Women’s College of Science) and graduated from there in 1943. She began working at the Meteorological Research Institute (part of the Japan Meteorological Agency) following the end of WWII. Her friend and mentor, Yasuo Miyake, who had gotten her the job at the Institute, suggested she look into measuring the concentration of carbon dioxide gas in seawater. At the time, no one was looking into carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas (partially due to the very low investment in 1950 in the idea of global warming). Saruhashi had to make much of her own equipment. She took painstaking measurements of how carbon dioxide varied by location and depth. For her work, she became the first woman to be awarded a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Tokyo in 1957. One year later, she established the Society of Japanese Women Scientists to promote women in science. It’s clear that even early in her career, she was a pioneer and supporter of furthering and helping other women in science.

In 1954, the United States conducted nuclear bomb tests at Bikini Atoll (an atoll in the Marshall Islands, which are located in the Pacific Ocean between Asia and the America’s). A crew of Japanese fishermen downwind of the test site fell ill, and one of them died, prompting Saruhashi and others at the Institute to set up monitoring stations to measure the amount of radioactivity in seawater and rainwater by Japan. She and her team were the first group in the world to look into the effects of bombs tested by the United States and the Soviet Union on the world’s atmosphere. Saruhshi discovered that radioactivity from the test reached the coast of Japan a year and a half after the test. She continued her research on radiation and showed that by 1969, radiation from the tests had spread to the whole of the pacific, making her research some of the first on the issues of nuclear testing. Her evidence was used by protesters in the United States and Soviet Union to stop those governments from performing above ground nuclear tests.

Later in her career, she showed that the Pacific Ocean releases about twice as much carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere as it absorbs, meaning it couldn’t help combat the effects of global warming.

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http://www.fofweb.com/History/HistRefMain.asp?iPin=WSM158&SID=2&DatabaseName=Modern+World+History+Online&InputText=%22global+warming%22&SearchStyle=&dTitle=Saruhashi%2C+Katsuko&TabRecordType=Biography&BioCountPass=15&SubCountPass=32&DocCountPass=3&ImgCountPass=1&MapCountPass=3&FedCountPass=&MedCountPass=4&NewsCountPass=0&RecPosition=6&AmericanData=&WomenData=&AFHCData=&IndianData=&WorldData=Set&AncientData=&GovernmentData=
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Dr. Katsuko Saruhashi (Original Post) redqueen Jul 2014 OP
Thank you, redqueen theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #1
Nice one! ismnotwasm Jul 2014 #2

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
1. Thank you, redqueen
Fri Jul 18, 2014, 07:47 AM
Jul 2014

Loved this closing paragraph...

When Saruhashi retired from the directorship of the Geochemical Laboratory, her coworkers gave a gift of 5,000,000 yen (about $50,000). She used the money to establish the Saruhashi Prize, given each year since 1981 to a Japanese woman making important contributions to the natural sciences. Its first recipient was population geneticist Tomoko Ohta. Saruhashi said the prize "highlight[s] the capabilities of women scientists…. Each winner has been not only a successful researcher but … a wonderful human being as well."

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