User:William Maury Morris II/Carlotta Maury

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DRAPER-MAURY FAMILY[edit]

Carlotta Joaquina Maury (1874–1938) American paleontologist.


A woman geologist and paleontologist deserving of serious study is Carlotta Joaquina Maury (1874-1938), a native of Hastings-on-Hudson, New York and the younger sister of Harvard astronomer Antonia Caetana de Paiva Pereira Maury (1866-1952).

A Ph.D. graduate of Cornell University, Carlotta studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and taught for several years at Columbia and Barnard Colleges and the University of the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa. She investigated microfossils in drilling samples along the Texas and Louisiana coasts and was given an official title as a paleontologist for the Louisiana Geological Survey.

In 1910 Carlotta was recruited to be the paleontologist for oil geologist A.C. Veatch’s year-long geological expedition to Venezuela, a study funded by the General Asphalt Company of Philadelphia.

Her detailed scientific analysis of the fossilized flora and fauna of Trinidad was published as volume 64 of the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Carlotta defied the conventional wisdom concerning women and field work and in 1916 led an expedition to the Dominican Republic, during a period of violent political upheaval on the island. She identified hundreds of new species of fossils and revised estimates for the geological age of rock structures on the island. From 1919 through her death, Carlotta continued to analyze the fossils and field notes she had collected and to publish in scientific journals. She also consulted for Royal Dutch Shell’s Venezuelan Division and the Brazilian government, for whom she produced a number of proprietary technical reports.

As a part of a larger historical research project, this article highlights Carlotta Maury’s [often she signed her work as "C. J or C. J. Maury] life and work in the context of both her family’s scientific accomplishments and the encouragements and obstacles she encountered, based in part on primary documents found at the Hastings-on-Hudson Historical Society.

Maury (talk) 16:20, 8 February 2015 (UTC)