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Elizabeth Ripper

Elizabeth Ripper
Alma mater
Occupation Geologist

Elizabeth Arnold Ripper (7 September 1909 – June 2004) was an Australian geologist, significant for her work in stromatoporoids.

Elizabeth or Betty, as she was generally referred to, was born in Melbourne, Australia. She attended Melbourne High School from 1925-1927. Ripper became interested in geology after attending classes in it at school in 1925. Her family were unable to persuade her from pursuing it at university.

Ripper attended the University of Melbourne taking a B.Sc. in geology from 1928-1931, winning the J.F.W. Payne exhibition in botany and Argus exhibition in geology in 1928. She was a Kernot and Wyselaskie Scholar in geology in 1932, while she undertook her M.Sc. While the Geology Department at the University was heavily influenced by the petrological studies of Prof. Ernest W. Skeats, Ripper was attracted to the palaeontological programs of Frederick A. Singleton. She attended geology field trips in company with a number of female students of the department, as well as Edwin Sherbon Hills. Ripper was first interested in Ordovician and Silurian graptolites, and would also write on Silurian (Lilydale Limestone) stromatoporoids for her Masters thesis. Frederick Chapman of the National Museum of Victoria was her mentor during this research. Her work impressed her supervisors, and Ripper was encouraged to go to Cambridge and study with Dr Gertrude Elles at the Sedgwick Museum, University of Cambridge, who was an expert on graptolites in 1933. Ripper would win an Orient free passage and take with her materials she had collected around Victoria, as well as stromatoporoids from Lilydale and Buchan. Elles was nearing retirement in 1933, and her supervision of her new Australian student, was fairly minimal. Elles had also supervised another Australian student, Dorothy Hill who took her PhD at Cambridge in 1933 and remained at Cambridge for another four years as a Fellow. Hill and Ripper would work in close quarters at the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, Newnham College and out in the field, collecting specimens in Wales. Ripper's research deviated from graptolites, and instead focussed on the stromatoporoids she had brought from Australia. She was also able to use materials within the British Museum (Natural History) and the Sedgwick Museum with the support of mentors, Dr W. D. Lang and Dr H. Dighton Thomas. She was awarded her PhD in 1936. Ripper published her research in Australian journals.


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