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Earth Day a Reminder to Care for Land, Water, Air

North Inlet - Winyah Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. Aerial view of meandering tidal creeks and extensive pristine marshes in North Inlet Estuary. Vicinity of Georgetown, South Carolina.
NOAA Photo Library/Flickr
North Inlet - Winyah Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. Aerial view of meandering tidal creeks and extensive pristine marshes in North Inlet Estuary. Vicinity of Georgetown, South Carolina.

Earth Day is held each April to remind people of the importance of caring for our world, according to USC Environmental Health Sciences Professor Joe Jones.  He practices what he preaches, as he regularly takes his students outdoors to pick up trash that has washed into a campus creek from Columbia’s Five Points area, where many students eat and drink.  He tells them that if trash could wash from one part of town to another, it could also get into the Congaree River and thus to the coast, and, ultimately, wash up on the shores of other countries. 

Geography Professor Kirsten Dow advises people who want to care for their planet to not only do individual acts of saving energy such as turning off unneeded lights, which cuts down on the burning of coal needed to generate that electricity – still 40 percent of South Carolina’s energy comes from coal- but to take their actions to work, and encourage their employers to use their purchasing power to do things like buy recyclable products and conserve energy on a larger scale than individuals can do.  Her fellow geographer  Dr. Greg Carbone echoes the sentiments of both Jones and Dow.  If mitigating greenhouse gas emissions, or any other conservation issue, is considered too expensive by society or politicians, he says, how expensive will it be in the future if we don’t conserve now?

Tut Underwood is producer of South Carolina Focus, a weekly news feature. A native of Alabama, Tut graduated from Auburn University with a BA in Speech Communication. He worked in radio in his hometown before moving to Columbia where he received a Master of Mass Communications degree from the University of South Carolina, and worked for local radio while pursuing his degree. He also worked in television. He was employed as a public information specialist for USC, and became Director of Public Information and Marketing for the South Carolina State Museum. His hobbies include reading, listening to music in a variety of styles and collecting movies and old time radio programs.