Английская Википедия:Elvira Wood (paleontologist)

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox person Elvira Wood (February 11, 1865[1] – December 30, 1928) was an American paleontologist who specialized in invertebrate paleontology.

Biography

She was born in Gouldsboro, Maine but grew up in Boston, Massachusetts.[1][2] She attended the State Normal School at Framingham.[3]

Because of her gender, Wood was a "special student" in the Department of Geology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology between 1893 and 1896.[2][4] She earned a master's degree (1908)[5] and a doctorate (1910)[6] from Columbia University. Her doctorate thesis was titled The Phylogeny of Certain Cerithiidae.[7] It was published by the New York Academy of Sciences.[3]

Paleontology

Museum and education work

She worked at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University in the 1890s and again during the 1910s.[4][2] While at the museum, she helped create exhibitions and cataloged fossils.[4] She would eventually donate her own fossil collection to the museum.[4]

Between 1896 and 1903, she worked as an instructor of paleontology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[4][1][2] Throughout this period, she did illustrations for and assisted many paleontologists, such as John Mason Clarke, the State Paleontologist of New York.[8]

In 1907, she began work as an instructor in paleontology at Barnard College, where she would earn several degrees.[2] In 1909, as her master's thesis, she edited and published Gerard Troost's unpublished monograph on the crinoids of Tennessee (1850).[9] Her work was cited well into the 1970s.[10] She became Curator in Columbia's Geology Department in 1909.[2]

In 1917, she became the Assistant Curator in Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, but after an accident in the same year, became disabled.[2] She continued to construct models for the museum and create illustrations for scholarly publication from her home in Massachusetts.[11][2][12]

United States Geological Survey

In 1903, Wood became the assistant to Charles D. Walcott, Director of the United States Geological Survey (USGS).[2] She worked for the USGS until 1907.[2]

Memberships

She gave a paper at the first meeting of the first annual meeting of the Paleontological Society.[13] She was a member of the Boston Society of Natural History and the National Geographic Society.[2]

Influence and impact

In 1898, Amadeus William Grabau named horn coral fossil Hadrophyllum woodi in her honor.[14] Charles D. Walcott named the Middle Cambrian fossils Aluda woodi and Coscinocyathus elvira in her honor.[15][16]

Publications

  • Wood, Elvira. Marcellus Limestones of Lancaster, Erie Co., N.Y. Paleontologic Papers 2, New York State Museum, December 1901.
  • Wood, Elvira. A new Crinoid from the Hamilton of Charlestown, Indiana, American Journal of Science, Vol. XII, October 1901, pp. 1–14. Pl. V.
  • Wood, Elvira. On New and Old Middle Devonic Crinoids, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Washington D.C., August 6, 1904, pp. 56–84, Pl. XV-XVI.
  • Wood, Elvira. A Critical Summary of Troost's Unpublished Manuscript on the Crinoids of Tennessee, Smithsonian Institution United States National Museum Bulletin 64, Washington D.C., 1909, pp. 1–150, Pl. 1–15.
  • Wood, Elvira. The Phylogeny of Certain Cerithidae, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Volume XXIV, New York, May 1910, pp. 1–92, Pl. I-IX.
  • Wood, Elvira. The Use of Crinoid Arms in Studies of Phylogeny, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Volume XX, New York, 1914, pp. 1–14, Pl. I-V.
  • Wood, Elvira. The Ancestry and Descendants of Ebenezer Wood of West Gouldsborough, Maine, Springfield Printing and Binding Company, Springfield, Mass. 1930.

References

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