Mary Anning found the fossils of prehistoric animals. Today many children like finding out about dinosaurs . When Mary Anning was a child, no one knew about these long-dead animals. Mary's fossil-hunting helped change the way people thought about the world
Google digs into history to salute British paleontologist with Doodle
Mary Anning was a pioneering paleontologist two centuries ago, at a
time when a number of notable women were pursuing the science of finding
fossils. Yet it was also an era when, as women, they could not be
rewarded with the highest professional recognition for their work.
In Southwest Britain, along the English Channel in Dorset, a young
Anning would scour and dig and unearth scientific treasures from the
marine fossil beds at Lyme Regis, where she would make a name for
herself within the field as collector and researcher and expert
The greatest fossil hunter ever known was
a woman from Lyme Regis. Mary Anning's discoveries were some of the
most significant geological finds of all time. They provided evidence
that was central to the development of new ideas about the history of
the Earth.
Early life and dangerous living
Mary Anning was born on 21
May 1799 into a humble family of dissenters in Lyme Regis, on the Dorset
coast. She and her brother Joseph were the only survivors among 10
children born to Richard Anning and his wife Mary Moore.
Named
after a sister who died in a house fire, Anning herself survived a
lightning strike that killed three others. Legend had it the lightning
turned her into a bright and observant child.
Selling seashells on the seashore
Anning's father Richard was a carpenter and cabinet-maker who taught his daughter how to look for and to clean fossils.
They
sold the ‘curiosities’ they collected from a stall on the seafront,
where they found customers among the middle classes who flocked to Lyme
in the summer.
Their shop was such a feature of the area that
some people think that Mary Anning was the inspiration for the
well-known tongue-twister 'She sells seashells on the seashore', which
was written by Terry Sullivan in1908.
Hardships
The family
remained very poor though and when Richard died in 1810 aged only 44,
as a result of consumption and injuries following a fall, it brought
great hardship.
Young Mary supplemented their meagre income by
continuing the trade. She had a good eye for fossils. The cliffs and
foreshore at Lyme are rich in belemnites and ammonites, and occasionally
reptiles and fishes, deposited from Jurassic seas 200 million years
ago.
Waves from the sea and landslides constantly exposed new
supplies. There were good pickings but it was a dangerous living –
mudflows, treacherous tides, unstable cliffs and unforgiving seas.
First fabulous find
In
1811, Anning’s brother Joseph found a skull protruding from a cliff.
Over a period of months Mary painstakingly uncovered an almost complete
skeleton of a ‘crocodile’.
The specimen was bought by the local
lord of the manor Henry Hoste Henley who sold it to William Bullock for
his Museum of Natural Curiosities in London.
This brought Mary Anning’s reputation to the attention of scientific circles. The specimen was later named Ichthyosaurus, the ‘fish-lizard’, by scientists de la Beche and Conybeare.
Help for destitute family
The Anning family had now established themselves as fossil hunters. However they remained poor, almost destitute.
In
1820 one of their patrons, Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas James Birch,
organised an auction of specimens he had purchased from them.
The
sale attracted interest from Britain and all over Europe and raised
£400 which he generously donated to them. The publicity consolidated
Mary Anning’s fame.
More sensational fossils
Further
sensational finds were made. New, more complete skeletons of
ichthyosaurs were discovered. This was followed by a complete skeleton
of the long-necked Plesiosaurus, the ‘sea-dragon’ in 1823. It proved the inspiration for Thomas Hawkins’ 1840 publication Book of the Great Sea Dragons.
This was followed by the ‘flying-dragon’ Pterodactylus in 1828, and Squaloraja, a fossil fish intermediary between a shark and a ray, in 1829.
In the winter of 1830, Anning found a new, large-headed Plesiosaurus,
bought for 200 guineas, £210, by William Willoughby, later Earl of
Enniskillen. Her discoveries were featured in the lithograph Duria
Antiquior, A More Ancient Dorset, prepared by Henry de la Beche
around1830 for her financial benefit.
A popular figure
Anning
was literate, despite having only a little education. She taught
herself geology and anatomy. She was visited by, and corresponded with,
eminent scientists of the time.
Her opinions were sought and she
was acknowledged as an expert in many areas, including on the rather
unglamorous coprolites (fossil faeces).
Surprisingly, members of
fashionable society called on her at Lyme. Their curiosity was mixed
with enchantment at her fossil hunting and her intelligence and humour.
Anning
had her detractors too. Georges Cuvier, France’s eminent anatomist,
accused her of fraud, an allegation she ably refuted.
Anning also made the discovery that ink from squid-like belemnites can be ground up and used for drawing.
Dorset home
Anning's
life revolved around Lyme Regis. She only left once in her lifetime,
for a short trip to London. Her picture shows a middle aged woman,
carrying with her hammer, accompanied by her dog, Tray.
Final recognition
Anning
died from breast cancer, aged 47. For one with such disadvantaged
beginnings, she had gained the respect and imagination of scientific and
lay public who gave her recognition in her lifetime.
Nine years
before her death she was given an annuity, or annual payment, raised by
members of the British Association for the Advancement of Science and
the Geological Society of London.
She was the first honorary member of the new Dorset County Museum.
Anning's
death in 1847 was recorded by the Geological Society (which did not
admit women until 1904) and her life commemorated by a stained glass
window in the local church.
No comments:
Post a Comment