Council of Heads of Australasian Herbaria |
Born in Brisbane 9 July 1909; died in Sydney 12 January 2008.
Born in Brisbane in 1909 and educated at Somerville House before being told by her parents to leave school at 16 and enroll at a business college. After working in a patent office and for four years at the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music in Sydney, she joined the Zoology Department of the University of Sydney in 1933. From that time until 1948, she worked as secretary, librarian, demonstrator and research assistant to Professor W.J. Dakin, and then as research assistant to Professor P.D.F. Murray.
From 1950 she regularly led students to the Heron Island and Lizard Island Research Stations on the Great Barrier Reef and did field work on the Victorian and Tasmanian coasts. In 1959 she made her first visit to Macquarie Island with the ANARE relief ship, returning in 1960, 1965 and 1968. From 1959 to 1971, she was a Professional Officer at the University of Sydney, and received the first Honorary Master of Science from the University of Sydney in 1962. She was a temporary Associate Professor at Stanford University in 1963 and a delegate to the 11th Pacific Science Congress in Tokyo in 1966.
She retired in 1971, but remained an active author and researcher. From 1974 to 1979 she worked with the New South Wales Fisheries Department, and during that time, carried out fieldwork and surveys at the coastal rock platforms at Jervis Bay and Ulladulla, and on the coasts of Lord Howe Island, Norfolk Island and Flinders Island.
Bennett died in Sydney at the age of 98.
Her papers and a collection of around 500 colour slides covering the last edition of Australian Seashores have been donated to the National Library of Australia and around 400 remaining slides to Pittwater Council.
Source: Extracted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isobel_Bennett ; http://superstarsofscience.com/scientist/isobel-bennett
Portrait Photo: image file captioned: "Isobel Eliza Toom Bennett AO" ; Extracted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Isobel_Bennett.jpg
573 specimens are recorded, mostly algae