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Rubber duck

Stylized, floating duck-shaped toy

Rubber duck

Stylized, floating duck-shaped toy

Several modern rubber ducks

A rubber duck, or rubber duckie, is a toy shaped like a duck that is usually yellow with a flat base. It may be made of rubber or rubber-like material such as vinyl plastic. Rubber ducks were invented in the late 19th century when it became possible to more easily shape rubber, and are believed to improve developmental skills in children during water play.

The yellow rubber duck has achieved an iconic status in Western pop culture and is often symbolically linked to bathing. Various novelty variations of the toy are produced, and many organisations use yellow rubber ducks in rubber duck races for fundraising worldwide.

History

A variety of novelty "Devil Duckies"

The history of the rubber duck is linked to the emergence of rubber manufacturing in the late 19th century. The earliest rubber ducks were made from harder rubber when manufacturers began using Charles Goodyear's invention, vulcanized rubber. Consequently, these solid rubber ducks were not capable of floating and were instead intended as chew toys.

Sculptor Peter Ganine created a sculpture of a duck in the 1940s. He patented it in 1949 and reproduced it as a floating toy, of which over 50 million were sold.

Besides the ubiquitous yellow rubber duck with which most people are familiar, there have been numerous novelty variations on the basic theme, including character ducks representing professions, politicians, or celebrities, a concept introduced by Mark Boldt's Rubba Ducks. There are also ducks that glow in the dark, quack, change color, have interior LED illumination, or include a wind-up mechanism that enables them to "swim". In 2001, The Sun, a British tabloid reported that Queen Elizabeth II had a rubber duck in her bathroom that wore an inflatable crown. The duck was spotted by a workman who was repainting her bathroom. The story prompted sales of rubber ducks in the United Kingdom to increase by 80% for a short period.

Rubber ducks are collected by enthusiasts. The 2011 Guinness World Record for World's Largest Rubber Duck Collection stood at 5,631 different rubber ducks, and was awarded to Charlotte Lee. In 2013, the rubber duck was inducted into the Toy Hall of Fame, a museum in Rochester, New York, along with the game of chess. Toys are selected based on factors like icon-status, longevity, and innovation.

Scientific studies

Oceanography

Main article: Friendly Floatees

During a Pacific storm on 10 January 1992, three 40-foot (12 m) containers holding 28,800 Friendly Floatees plastic bathtub toys from a Chinese factory were washed off a ship, containing 7,200 each of blue turtles, yellow ducks, red beavers, and green frogs. Two-thirds of the toys floated south and landed three months later on the shores of Indonesia, Australia, and South America. The remaining 10,000 toys headed north to Alaska and then completed a full circle back near Japan, caught up in the same North Pacific Gyre current as the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Many of the toys then entered the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia and were trapped in the Arctic ice. They moved through the ice at a rate of one mile (1.6 km) per day, and in 2000 they were sighted in the North Atlantic. The movement of the toys had been monitored by American oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer. Bleached by sun and seawater, the ducks and beavers had faded to white, but the turtles and frogs had kept their original colors.

This incident was the subject of Donovan Hohn's 2011 book Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea, and the inspiration for Eric Carle's 2005 picture book 10 Little Rubber Ducks.

Glacial melting

In August 2008, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory undertook studies of Greenland's Jacobshavn Isbræ to determine how interior glacial meltflow during the summer influenced its movement. A sophisticated football-sized probe that had a GPS device, pressure sensor, thermometer and accelerometer was lowered by rope into one of the glacier's moulins. The probe's equipment was designed to find structures such as waterfalls inside the ice. Unfortunately the probe went silent, so ninety rubber ducks marked in English, Danish, and Inuit with the text "science experiment" and "reward", along with an email address to contact if found, were also put into the moulins and it was hoped that the ducks would eventually exit and be found by hunters or fishermen around Baffin Bay. As of 2012, none of the ducks were found or returned, possibly due to being trapped in large aquifers later discovered inside the ice.

References

References

  1. "Rubber Duck".
  2. (13 January 2021). "The history of rubber duck". St Neots Museum.
  3. "Rubber Duck {{!}} National Toy Hall of Fame".
  4. "Rubber Duck".
  5. (13 August 1974). "Peter Ganine; L.A. Sculptor". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  6. Mike Blahmik. "Rubber Duck Dreams." ''Star Tribune''. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  7. (5 October 2001). "Queen Goes Quackers at Bath Time". BBC News.
  8. (10 April 2011). "Largest collection of rubber ducks". Guinness World Records Limited.
  9. (7 November 2013). "Toy Hall of Fame inducts chess, rubber duck; snubs Army men, 8-Ball". Los Angeles Times.
  10. (7 November 2013). "Chess, rubber duck squeak into National Toy Hall of Fame". CNN.
  11. (2 January 2010). "Sesame Street: Little Richard Sings Rubber Duckie". [[Children's Television Workshop]].
  12. "You're the one: Akron RubberDucks".
  13. (28 March 2017). "Yellow Rubber Duck is a Potent Protest Symbol". Bloomberg.
  14. "Yellow Rubber Duck becomes a Symbol of Thai Protests". SCMP.
  15. (2 May 2013). "Reuze gele badeend". De Standaard.
  16. Sophia Sun. (25 April 2013). "Rubber Duck". Hk.lifestyle.yahoo.com.
  17. "First Day of Florentijn Hofman's Rubber Duck Exhibition in Hong Kong".
  18. "Giant Rubber Duck Makes Splash in Hong Kong Harbor". ABC News.
  19. Didi Kirsten Tatlow. (4 June 2013). "Censored in China: 'Today,' 'Tonight' and 'Big Yellow Duck'". The New York Times.
  20. Bourdon, Stuart A.. (2023-04-04). "What in the Duck Is Jeep Ducking?".
  21. (2025-04-22). "How a Rubber Duck Became a Symbol of Jeep Culture".
  22. (1 April 2021). "What connects the 'Ever Given', the Suez Canal and 7,200 rubber ducks loose in the Pacific?". [[The National (Abu Dhabi).
  23. Curtis C. Ebbesmeyer and W. James Ingraham Jr.. (October 1994). "Pacific Toy Spill Fuels Ocean Current Pathways Research". Earth in Space.
  24. CBS. (31 July 2003). "Rubber Duckies Map The World". CBS.
  25. Ihaveavoice. (2013-07-15). "Friendly Floatees: Rubber Ducks in the Ocean".
  26. Zabarenko, Deborah. (1 September 2008). "Can rubber ducks help track a melting glacier?". [[Reuters]].
  27. Klotz, Irene. (13 July 2010). "Rubber duckies to the rescue in glacial research". [[NBC News]].
  28. Mohan, Geoffrey. (12 January 2015). "Ice researchers capture catastrophic Greenland melt". [[Los Angeles Times]].
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