Jurassic Mary

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A01=Patricia Pierce
Ammonite
ammonite film
ammonite movie
amonite
amonite film
amonite movie
Author_Patricia Pierce
belamite
Category=DNBT
Category=NHB
Charlotte Murchison
charouth
dimorphodon macronyx
Dorset
Elizabeth Philpot
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fish lizard skeleton
flying dragon
fossil films
fossil films|francis lee
fossil lady
fossil woman
fossils
francis lee
geology films
henry de la beche
ichthyosaur
ichthyosaurus
Jurassic coast
kate winslet
Lyme Regis
male geologists
mary anning
mary anning and the primeval monsters
megaladon
megalodon
molly anning
paleontology
plesiosaur
plesiosaurs giganteus
pterosaur
Roderick Murchison
Saoirse Ronan
sharks teeth
sharks tooth
she sells seashells
sir henry de la beche
sir henry de la beche|women in history
william buckland
women in history
women in science
women scientist
women's history

Product details

  • ISBN 9780750940399
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Apr 2006
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Spinster Mary Anning, uneducated and poor, was of the wrong sex, wrong class and wrong religion, but fate decreed that she was exactly the right person in the right place and time to pioneer the emerging science of palaeontology, the study of fossils.

Born in Lyme Regis in 1799, Mary learned to collect fossils with her cabinet-maker father. The unstable cliffs and stealthy sea made the task dangerous but after her father died the sale of fossils sustained her family. Mary’s fame started as an infant when she survived a lightning strike that killed the three adults around her. Then, aged twelve, she caught the public’s attention when she unearthed the skeleton of a ‘fish lizard’ or Ichthyosaurus.

She later found the first Plesiosaurus giganteus, with its extraordinary long neck associated with the Loch Ness monster, and, dramatically, she unearthed the first, still rare, Dimorphodon macronyx, a frightening ‘flying dragon’ with hand claws and teeth. Yet her many discoveries were announced to the world by male geologists like the irrepressible William Buckland and Sir Henry De La Beche and they often received the credit.

In Jurassic Mary Patricia Pierce redresses this imbalance, bringing to life the extraordinary, little-known story of this determined and pioneering woman.

Patricia Pierce is the author of Old London Bridge, published by Headline in August 2001, and published by them in paperback in July 2002, and of The Great Shakespeare Fraud (Sutton, April 2004). A Canadian, Pat lives in Walton on Thames, Surrey.

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