|
Irene
Crespin 1896 - 1980 micropalaeontologist
Irene
Crespin (1896-1980), geologist and micropalaeontologist, was born
on 12 November 1986 in Melbourne. On the death of her mother in
1902 she and her brother were sent to live with relatives at Mansfield,
Victoria, where Irene attended the State primary school, the Convent
of Mercy and Mansfield Agricultural High School. Her interest in
geological sciences was first aroused by the headmaster, Dr Charles
Fenner, an eminent geologist and geographer.
She returned to Melbourne in 1914 and enrolled in 1915 at the University
of Melbourne, intending to become a teacher; influenced by Frederick
Chapman, lecturer in palaeontology, she became a geologist. Her
ability to get things done was recognised in 1917 when she was elected
to the Students Representative Council, the only woman on the Council,
and its first woman president (1918).
After graduating BA in 1919 she continued her studies while undertaking
coaching. Later she worked part-time for the Geological Survey of
Victoria on the describing of both macro- and micro-fossils found
in sediments from the Sorrento bore on the Mornington Peninsula.
In December 1927, Irene was appointed assistant palaeontologist
to Frederick Chapman, then Commonwealth palaeontologist in the newly
created Geological Branch of the Department of Home Affairs. They
worked in accommodation provided by the National Museum (now Museum
of Victoria); equipment and facilities were poor but they had access
to the Museum's extensive fossil collection and library.
In 1935 Irene succeeded Chapman as Commonwealth palaeontologist,
at about half his salary. (The salary disparity continued throughout
her working life.) The appointment was in Canberra, to work closely
with the Commonwealth geological adviser. 'They' had forgotten she
was arriving and no accommodation had been arranged. She booked
into the Ainslie Hotel for a week and stayed fifteen years.
An initial scarcity of scientific literature in Canberra was a hardship.
The purchase by the Geological Branch of essential reference books
began what has become the Bureau of Mineral Resources' excellent
and extensive library. In a fire at the Bureau in 1953 many publications
were damaged beyond repair. Irene lost personal copies of rare reference
books, scientific papers, type collections and photographs.
She made many field trips within Australia to collect fossils and
to see the geological environment in which fossili-ferous sediments
occurred. From the start of her involvement in the search for oil
(and during the war for other minerals) she made regular trips to
the Gippsland area, on occasions descending 1200 feet to the bottom
of the Lakes Entrance shaft in a kibble to collect samples, and
also visiting Roma and the Carnarvon Basin.
In 1939 Irene visited Java and Sumatra for six weeks to consult
with micro-palaeontologists in the government service and industry
regarding the problems of Tertiary correlation in the Indo-Pacific
region. Such correlations were extremely important in the search
for petroleum. Although it was against normal Department policy
to allow a woman to make official overseas trips she was given permission
to visit the United States in 1951 where she had been invited to
address the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, and to
have discussions with micropalaeontologists and study fossil collections,
especially those of foraminifera.
She was compulsorily retired at 65 though employed afterwards on
a contract basis. Irene Crespin had great enthusiasm and drive,
a fine sense of humour, and determination to succeed against odds.
She attended many conferences, chaired specialist committees and
published in Australia and overseas journals close to 90 papers
as a single author, over 20 as a joint author and also wrote more
than 100 open file reports and notes. She was vitally interested
in people, made many friends and was an enthusiastic traveller.
Cricket was a great love: she presented the Crespin Cup to be contested
annually between 'hard rocks' and 'soft rocks' from the Bureau.
She played golf and tennis, and was a talented pianist.
She was a long serving secretary and president (1957) of the Royal
Society of Canberra, secretary from 1952 of the Territories Division
of the Geological Society of Australia and chairman (1955), a charter
member of Soroptimist International of Canberra and president (1957).
She received many honours including the Clarke Medal of the Royal
Society of New South Wales (1956), a DSc from the University of
Melbourne (1960), honorary membership of ANZAAS (1976) and the OBE
(1969). The Bureau of Mineral Resources Bulletin no. 192 - The Crespin
Volume - was published in her honour. She died on the 2 January
1980.
Margaret Bartlett
Irene Crespin Memoirs of a Micro-palaeontologist (published
in limited edition by the Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and
Geophysics) 1980.
|