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THE STATE WE’RE IN: From whale songs to poetry, a remarkable journey

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In 1968, biologists were working to unravel the mystery of the other-worldly sounds made by humpback whales. What did they mean?

Looking for help, biologist Roger Payne came to New Jersey to visit Scott McVay, who years earlier had researched dolphin communications. Scott knew how to use a sound spectrograph, a machine that turns sounds into visual graphs, and Payne brought him new recordings of humpback whales.

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Scott and his mathematician wife, Hella, converted the whale recordings into sonograms. They pored over printouts spread across their living room floor.

Suddenly it dawned on them: the graphs showed repeating, structured patterns. Together, they and Payne discovered that humpback whales sing six-octave songs with distinctive themes, over and over again. The sounds are musical, one of nature’s most beautiful songs!

This discovery ignited the worldwide movement to save endangered whales from over-hunting, and is recounted in Scott’s 2015 memoir,Surprise Encounters with Artists and Scientists, Whales and other Living Things.

The book covers eight decades of Scott’s forays into science, art, history, philanthropy, travel and conservation – and his brushes with some of the most influential minds of our time.

In addition to researching whales and dolphins, Scott founded one of the country’s leading poetry festivals, served as an Army counter-intelligence agent in post-World War II Berlin, directed two philanthropic organizations, ran the renowned Chautauqua Institution for the Arts and was Princeton University’s first recording secretary.

To this day, he’s a tireless cheerleader – and an inspiration – for all who try to make a positive impact in the world.

Surprise Encounters recounts Scott’s life and adventures but, unlike most autobiographies, it’s not really about him. “Overall, the book is composed of my heroes,” he explains. “Their lives have been dedicated to something larger than their own lives.”

His heroes include conservationists and researchers fairly unknown outside scientific circles. Among them are Lester Brown, a South Jersey native who farmed tomatoes as a teenager but went on to found the Worldwatch Institute and Earth Policy Institute; and fellow South Jersey native Sylvia Earle, a respected marine biologist, explorer and author.

Then there’s George Archibald, who protected the habitats of endangered cranes in Wisconsin; Tom Kimball of the National Audubon Society, who helped reduce international whale hunting by leading a boycott of products from Japan and Russia; and John Terborgh, who saved 2 million acres of rainforest in South America.

On Sunday, Feb. 18, at 2 p.m., Scott will share stories about his conservation heroes as he reads excerpts from Surprise Encounters at the Watershed Center in Pennington. The event is jointly sponsored by the Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, New Jersey Conservation Foundation and the Pinelands Preservation Alliance.

Admission is free, but advance reservations are required. To register, go to https://interland3.donorperfec t.net/weblink/weblink.aspx? name=E8258&id=119

Scott said he hopes his talk will inspire people to pay attention to the “miracles” that occur throughout the natural world, and restrain the human impulse to exploit nature for our own gain.

Scott styled his book as a series of stories based on The Decameron, an Italian classic containing 100 tales told by ten people sheltering in a secluded villa in the 1300s to escape the Black Death. “My thought was to do 100, but the stories kept coming until I reached 152,” he said.

Scott is also a poet, and several of his poems are included in Surprise Encounters.  He and Hella were the force behind the Poetry Trail at Greenway Meadows in Princeton.

Here’s one poem, “Unexpected Journey,” embodying the spirit of the book:

What is life
but an Unexpected Journey?
We arrive, unscripted, trying to discover
our role in this play.
Some lucky few do.
The passionate few are ever awe-struck
full of wonder at each new discovery.

Scott considers himself one of the lucky few. He radiates joy in scientific and artistic discoveries, and hope that humanity will strive for a sustainable future for all of Earth’s inhabitants.

To get a copy of Surprise Encounters, go to https://www.amazon.com/Surpris e-Encounters-Artists-Scientist s-Whales/dp/1941948022.

And to learn about preserving New Jersey’s land and natural resources, visit the New Jersey Conservation Foundation website atwww.njconservation.org or contact me at info@njconservation.org.

Michele S. Byers is executive director of the New Jersey Conservation Foundation in Morristown.

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