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Isabel
Cookson 1893 - 1973 palaeobotanist
Isabel
Clifton Cookson (1893-1973), botanist and palaeobotanist, was born
on Christmas Day 1893 at Hawthorn, Melbourne, youngest daughter
of John Cookson and only child of his second wife Elizabeth (born
Somers). She was educated at Methodist Ladies' College, Hawthorn,
gaining honours in anatomy, physiology, and botany in the Senior
Public Examination. She also developed skills as a pianist.
At the University of Melbourne she graduated in 1916 with honours
in zoology and botany, gaining the exhibition in the latter. She
represented the University in inter-university tennis. Between 1916
and 1930 she was awarded several research grants and scholarships
to pursue botanical research in the Department of Biology, University
of Melbourne. She also tutored undergraduate students in that department
and at Newman College. During these years she investigated crown
rot in walnut trees and then turned her attention to fossil plants.
Her palaeobotanical studies were both pioneering and significant,
bringing her international recognition and acclaim.
With Professor W. H. Lang, University of Manchester, Isabel Cookson
published several important papers on some of the oldest known vascular
land plants occurring in Victoria during latest Silurian and Early
Devonian times (about 370-410 million years ago). She collected
many of the specimens herself from rocks exposed in rugged terrain
near Walhalla and at other localities in the upper reaches of the
Yarra River. It is from this work that theories have been developed
on early land plant evolution.
In 1930 when a separate Botany Department was established in the
University of Melbourne, Isabel Cookson lectured to the first evening
course in first year botany. She was awarded her DSc in 1932. In
the 1940s she turned her attention to microscopic fossil plant remains:
to spores, pollen, and phyto-plankton micro-organisms. Studies on
these and on fossil woods, leaves, and fruits provided a wealth
of evidence on the composition of Australia's past vegetation. Moreover,
she demonstrated the usefulness of plant microfossils in geological
correlation and in oil exploration. The significance of this pioneering
work was recognised by CSIRO, the State Electricity Commission of
Victoria, and the University of Melbourne, where, in 1949, a Pollen
Research Unit was established under her leadership. Her official
retirement was in 1959, but she continued productive research until
her death on 1 July 1973.
In 1957 she was elected corresponding member of the Botanical Society
of America and during 1959-62 acted as honorary associate in palaeontology
to the National Museum of Victoria (now Museum of Victoria). A symposium
was held at the University of Queensland in 1971 to commemorate
her outstanding contributions to palaeobotany and the papers were
published by the Geological Society of Australia. In her research
career she published 85 papers, 52 of them in collaboration with
seventeen other scientists. Thirty of these were published after
her retirement. Her name is honoured by an award granted annually
for the best palaeobotanical paper presented at the Botanical Society
of America meetings.
Known affectionately as Cookie by her colleagues, she had a close
circle of friends with whom she shared her musical and travel interests.
As a young woman, she was left to support and nurse her mother through
a long illness and under strained financial circumstances. After
World War II, when her university salary improved, she developed
skills as an astute investor on the stock exchange. Nevertheless,
she was never wasteful and used her financial resources to support
her post-retirement research and overseas visits associated with
that research.
Mary E. Dettmann Geological Society of Australia Special Publication
no 4 1973.
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