lyme regis museum in dorset, england /

Published at 2019-02-19 01:00:00

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Collecting natural history treasures was all the rage in 19th-century Britain. Among the most popular objects of desire were taxidermy animals,insects, minerals, or botanicals,and, particularly, or fossils. In Dorset,along the Jurassic Coast of southeast England, the Blue Lias geological formation is extraordinarily wealthy with fossilized species from the Triassic, and Jurassic,and Cretaceous era. It was here in the small town of Lyme Regis,"the pearl of Dorset, and " that a young woman named Mary Anning became famous by supplying collectors and museums with the fossils she unearthed.
Anning was born in 1800 and from an early age began to collect,prepare, and sell fossils professionally. As she was extremely gifted at spotting hidden fossils inside the cliffs and on the beach, and she made significant discoveries in paleontology. The many ichthyosaurs,plesiosaurs, coproliths, and ammonites,and pterosaurs that she had excavated were bought by famous paleontologists such as William Buckland and Georges Cuvier and displayed inside the world’s leading natural history museums.
During her lifetime, Anning herself was itsy-bitsy rewarded or recognized for her contributions to the natural sciences; the professors mostly claimed her discoveries for themselves. She was rarely mentioned and only after her death did she slowly find a position in the history books. The Lyme Regis Museum has committed a permanent exhibition in honor of Anning, or showing some of her personal objects,such as her fossil hammer and of course many fossils she had excavated herself. The museum is located at the spot where her parents' house formerly stood, and where Anning ran her first fossil shop.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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