Changing Narratives in the History of Oceanography

Adler, Antony. 2014. The ship as laboratory: Making space for field science at sea. Journal of the History of Biology 47: 333–362.

Article  Google Scholar 

———. 2016. The hybrid shore: The Marine Station movement and scientific uses of the Littoral, 1843–1910. In Soundings and crossings: Doing science at sea, 1800–1970, ed. Katharine Anderson and Helen M. Rozwadowski, 145–178. Sagamore Beach: Science History.

Google Scholar 

———. 2017. Legitimizing marine field science: Albert Ist of Monaco. In Understanding field science institutions, ed. Patience A. Schell, Christer Nordlund, Karl Grandin, and Helena Ekerholm, 157–191. Sagamore Beach: Science History Publications/Watson Publishing International.

Google Scholar 

———. 2019. Neptune’s laboratory: Fantasy, fear, and science at sea. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

———. 2020. Deep horizons: Canada’s underwater habitat program and vertical dimensions of marine sovereignty. Centaurus 62: 763–782. https://doi.org/10.1111/1600-0498.12287.

Article  Google Scholar 

———. 2022. Science: Histories, imaginations, spaces. In The Routledge handbook of ocean space, ed. Kimberly Peters, Jon Anderson, Andrew Davies, and Philip Steinberg, 34–45. New York: Routledge.

Chapter  Google Scholar 

Adler, Antony, and Erik Dücker. 2018. When Pasteurian science went to sea: The birth of marine microbiology. Journal of the History of Biology 51: 107–133.

Article  Google Scholar 

Banoub, Daniel. 2021. Fishing measures: A critique of desk-bound reason. St. John’s, Nfld: Memorial University Press.

Google Scholar 

Benson, Keith R. 1988. Why American Marine Stations?: The teaching argument. American Zoologist 28: 7–14.

Article  Google Scholar 

———. 2013. Forward. In Places, people, tools: Oceanography in the Mediterranean and beyond. Proceedings of the eighth international congress for the history of oceanography, ed. Christiane Groeben, 9–10. Naples: Giannini Editore.

Google Scholar 

Benson, Keith R., and Philip F. Rehbock, eds. 2002. Oceanographic history: The Pacific and beyond. University of Washington Press.

Google Scholar 

Benson, Keith R., Helen M. Rozwadowski, and David K. van Keuren. 2004. Introduction. In The machine in Neptune’s garden: Historical perspectives on technology and the marine environment, xiii–xxviii. Sagamore Beach: Science History Publications/Watson Publishing International.

Google Scholar 

Bolster, W. Jeffrey. 2014. The Mortal Sea: Fishing the Atlantic in the age of sail. Cambridge, MA/London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Google Scholar 

Braudel, Fernand. 1949. La Mediterranee et le monde mediterraneen a l’époque de Philippe II. Paris: Colin.

Google Scholar 

Burstyn, Harold L. 1968. The historian of science and oceanography. In Premier Congrès International d’Histoire de l’Océanographie, Monaco – 1966, ed. Jacqueline Carpine-Lancre and John Leighly, vol. 2, 665–676. Monte Carlo: Bulletin de l’Institut Océanographique 2. Imprimierie Nationale de Monaco.

Google Scholar 

———. 2001. ‘Big science’ in Victorian Britain: The challenger expedition (1872–6) and its report (1881–95). In Understanding the oceans: A century of ocean exploration, ed. Margaret Deacon, Tony Rice, and Colin Summerhayes, 27–48. London/New York: University College London Press.

Google Scholar 

Cohen, Margaret. 2022. The underwater eye: How the movie camera opened the depths and unleashed new realms of fantasy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Corfield, Richard. 2003. The silent landscape: The scientific voyage of HMS challenger. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/10725.

de Bont, Raf. 2015. Stations in the field: A history of place-based animal research, 1870–1930. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Deacon, Margaret. 1965. Founders of marine science in Britain: The work of the early fellows of the royal society. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 20 (1): 28–50.

Google Scholar 

Deacon, Margaret B. 1971. Scientists and the sea, 1650–1900: A study of marine science (1st ed). London: Academic Press.

Google Scholar 

Deacon, Margaret B. 1993. Crisis and compromise: The Foundation of Marine Stations in Britain during the late 19th century. Earth Sciences History 12: 19–47.

Article  Google Scholar 

———. 1997. Scientists and the sea, 1650–1900: A study of marine science. 2nd ed. Brookfield: Ashgate.

Google Scholar 

Doel, Ronald E., Tanya J. Levin, and Mason K. Marker. 2006. Extending modern cartography to the ocean depths: Military patronage, cold war priorities, and the Heezen-Tharp mapping project, 1952–1959 [Included in virtual special edition celebrating the journal of historical geography at 40]. Journal of Historical Geography 32 (2006): 605–626.

Article  Google Scholar 

Dolan, John. 2020. The origins of oceanography in France. Oceanography 33: 126–133. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26937752.

Article  Google Scholar 

Egerton, Frank N. 2014. History of ecological sciences, part 51: Formalizing marine ecology, 1870s to 1920s. The Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 95: 347–430. https://doi.org/10.1890/0012-9623-95.4.347.

Article  Google Scholar 

Elias, Ann. 2019. Coral empire: Underwater oceans, colonial tropics, visual modernity. Durham: Duke University Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Ericson, Kjell David. 2020. The Misaki Marine Biological Station’s dual roles for zoology and fisheries, 1880s–1930s. In Why study biology by the sea? ed. Karl S. Matlin, Jane Maienschein, and Rachel A. Ankeny, 87–115. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Google Scholar 

Fernando, Tamara. 2022. Seeing like the sea: A multispecies history of the Ceylon pearl fishery 1800–1925. Past & Present 254: 127–160. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtab002.

Article  Google Scholar 

Finley, Carmel. 2011. All the fish in the sea: Maximum sustainable yield and the failure of fisheries management. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Forman, Paul. 1985. Behind quantum electronics: National security as basis for physical research in the United States, 1940–1960. Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences. 18: 149–229.

Article  Google Scholar 

Guberlet, Muriel L. 1964. Explorers of the sea: Famous oceanographic expeditions. New York: The Ronald Company.

Google Scholar 

Hamblin, Jacob Darwin. 2005. Oceanographers and the cold war: Disciples of marine science. 1st ed. Seattle: University of Washington Press.

Google Scholar 

———. 2008. Poison in the well: Radioactive waste in the oceans at the Dawn of the nuclear age. Rutgers: Rutgers University Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Hardy, Penelope K, and Helen M Rozwadowski. 2020. Maury for modern times: Navigating a racist legacy in ocean science. Oceanography 33 (3): 10–15. https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2020.302.

Helmreich, Stefan. 2009. Alien Ocean: Anthropological voyages on microbial seas. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

Herdman, William A. 1923. Founders of oceanography and their work. London: Edward Arnold.

Google Scholar 

Hubbard, Jennifer Mary. 2006. A science on the scales: The rise of Canadian Atlantic fisheries biology, 1898–1939. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Google Scholar 

Jones, Erika. 2023. The challenger expedition: Exploring the ocean’s depths. London: Royal Museums Greenwich.

Google Scholar 

Kevles, Daniel. 1990. Cold war and hot physics: Science, security, and the American state, 1945–56. Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 20: 239–264.

Article  Google Scholar 

Knauss, John A. 2000. The emergence of the National Science Foundation as a supporter of ocean sciences in the United States. In 50 years of ocean discovery: National Science Foundation 1950–2000, 3–8. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

Google Scholar 

Kohlstedt, Sally Gregory. 2022. Collaboration, gender, and leadership at the Minnesota Seaside Station, 1901–1907. Journal of the History of Biology. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-022-09679-4.

Lajus, Julia. 2021. Materiality of marine sciences in late Imperial Russia and early Soviet Union: Research vessels, instruments, laboratory practices. Art 14: 245–265. https://doi.org/10.4000/artefact.10129.

Article  Google Scholar 

Lehman, Jessica. 2018. From ships to robots: The social relations of sensing the World Ocean. Social Studies of Science 48: 57–79. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312717743579.

Article  Google Scholar 

Linklater, Eric. 1972. The voyage of the challenger. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company Inc.

Google Scholar 

Lopes, Maria Margaret. 2018. The challenger Deep-Sea expedition (1872–1876) in Brazil: The circulation of news and knowledge. In Viaggiatori: The scientific dialogue linking America, Asia and Europe between the 12thand the 20thcentury. Theories and techniques traveling in space and time, ed. Fabio D’Angelo, 118–132. Naples: Associazione culturale Viaggiatori.

Google Scholar 

Luk, Christine Yi Lai. 2020. The first Marine Biological Station in modern China: Amoy University and amphioxus. In Why study biology by the sea? ed. Karl S. Matlin, Jane Maienschein, and Rachel A. Ankeny, 68–86. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Google Scholar 

Macdougall, Doug. 2019. Endless novelties of extraordinary interest: The voyage of H.M.S. challenger and the birth of modern oceanography. Illustrated edition. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Google Scholar 

Martínez-Rius, Beatriz. 2020. For the benefit of all men: Oceanography and Franco-American scientific diplomacy in the cold war, 1958–1970. Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 43: 581–605. https://doi.org/10.1002/bewi.202000015.

Article  Google Scholar 

Matlin, Karl S., Jane Maienschein, and Rachel A. Ankeny, eds. 2020. Why study biology by the sea? Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Google Scholar 

Matsuda, Matt K. 2012. Pacific worlds: A history of seas, peoples, and cultures. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Book  Google Scholar 

McConnell, Anita. 1982. No sea too deep: The history of oceanographic instruments. Bristol: Hilger.

Google Scholar 

Mikhailov, N.N., R. Tatusko, and Sydney Levitus. 2002. Russian marine expeditionary investigations of the World Ocean. Silver Spring: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service. ftp://ftp.nodc.noaa.gov/pub/data.nodc/woa/PUBLICATIONS/atlas56.pdf.

Google Scholar 

Mills, Eric L. 1983. Problems of deep-Sea biology: An historical perspective. In The sea, ed. Gilbert T. Rowe, vol. 8, 1–79. Wiley.

Google Scholar 

———. 1990. What is history of oceanography. History of Oceanography Newsletter 2: 2–3.

Google Scholar 

———. 1993. The historian of science and oceanography after twenty years. Earth Sciences history 12: 5–18. https://www.jstor.org/stable/24137418.

Article  Google Scholar 

———. 2008. Editorial: The history of oceanography after forty years. History of Oceanography Newsletter 20: 3–4.

Google Scholar 

———. 2011. The fluid envelope of our planet: How the study of ocean currents became a science. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Google Scholar 

———. 2012. Biological oceanography: An early history, 1870–1960. University of Toronto Press.

Google Scholar 

Muka, Samantha K. 2014. Portrait of an outsider: Class, gender, and the scientific career of Ida M. Mellen. Journal of the History of Biology 47: 29–61. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-0

Comments (0)

No login
gif