Anita Conti (Armenian: Անիթա Գոնթի; née Caracotchian) (17 May 1899 – 25 December 1997) was a French explorer and photographer, and the first French female oceanographer.
Anita Conti | |
---|---|
Born | Anita Caracotchian 17 May 1899 |
Died | 25 December 1997 Douarnenez, France | (aged 98)
Nationality | French |
Occupation(s) | Explorer, photographer, oceanographer |
Known for | First French women oceanographer |
Spouse | Marcel Conti |
Biography
editAnita Caracotchian was born in Ermont in Seine-et-Oise to Léon (Leven) Caracotchian, an Armenian-born physician in the field of obstetrics, and his wife Alice Lebon. She spent her childhood being educated at home by different tutors and travelling with her family, gradually developing a passion for books and the sea.
After moving to Paris, she concentrated on writing poems and the art of book binding. Her work got the attention of celebrities and she won different awards and prizes for her creativity in London, Paris, New York and Brussels.
In 1927, she married a diplomat, Marcel Conti, and started traveling around the world, exploring the seas, documenting and reporting what she saw and experimented. Spending time on the fishing boats for days and even months on certain occasions gave her a deeper understanding of the problematic faced by the fishermen. In between the two world war, she developed the technique of fishing maps apart from the already used navigational charts. For two years, from one vessel to another, she observed the French fishermen along the coast and Saharan Africa discovering fish species unknown in France. She published many scientific reports on the negative effects of industrial fishing and the different problems related to fishing practices.
From 1943 and approximately for 10 years, she studied in the Mauritian islands, Senegal, Guinea and Ivory Coast, the nature of the seabed, different fish species and their nutritional values in regards of protein deficiency for the local populations. Gradually, she developed better preservation techniques, fishing methods and installed artificial dens for further studies. She even founded an experimental fishery for sharks. She became more and more conscientious of the misuse of natural resources by the fishing industry and the major waste that could be prevented.
In 1971 she published L’Ocean, les bêtes et l’homme, to denounce the disaster that men create and its effects on the oceans. Through many conferences and forums and for the rest of her life, she advocated for the betterment of the marine world.
She died on 25 December 1997 in Douarnenez, Brittany.
On 17 May 2019 Google Doodle commemorated Anita Conti's 120th birthday.[1]
Works
edit- Géants des mers chaudes, Paris, 1957; éd. Payot & Rivages, 1997 (ISBN 2228890936)
- Racleurs d'océans, Paris, 1993; éd. Payot & Rivages, 1998 (ISBN 2228895911)
- [La] route est si longue avant la nuit, Fécamp, 1996
- L'Océan, les bêtes et l'homme ou l'ivresse du risque, éd. André Bonne, 1971
- Les Terre-neuvas, éd. du Chêne, Paris, 2004 (ISBN 2842775422)
References
edit- ^ "Anita Conti's 120th Birthday". Google. 17 May 2019.
Bibliography
edit- La dame de la mer - Anita Conti (1899-1997), photographe, éd. revue Noire en collaboration avec l'association "Cap sur Anita Conti", 1998 (ISBN 2-909571-35-1)
- Catherine Reverzy, Anita conti : 20 000 Lieues sur les mers, Odile Jacob, 2006 (ISBN 2738117422)