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Jane Stephens

Jane Stephens
Born 9 October 1879
Clontarf, Dublin, Ireland
Died 11 December 1959(1959-12-11) (aged 80)
Hospital of St John and St Elizabeth
Fields Zoology
Institutions National Museum of Ireland
Alma mater Royal College of Science for Ireland
Known for Authority on Sponges
Influences Robert Lloyd Praeger, Robert Francis Scharff, H.J. Buchanan-Wollaston, James Nathaniel Halbert

Jane Stephens was an Irish zoologist who was considered a leading authority on sponges in Ireland with specialised knowledge in other marine life who identified and named over 40 sponges new to science. From 1905 to 1920 she was employed in the Natural History Division of the National Museum of Ireland working primarily on the collections of marine invertebrates, including taking part in the Clare Island Survey. Robert Lloyd Praeger testified to her knowledge of and work with Irish sponges stating that "Most of what we know of this group, whether marine or fresh-water, in Ireland, or off the Irish coasts, is due to her work."

Stephens was born in Dublin in 1879, the sixth child of Quakers Albert and Jane Stephens. Her elder sister, Laura Stephens, was a talented linguist working as a translator in a government department. She attended Alexandra College excelling in her studies as well as hockey and lawn tennis. She then went on to be the second woman to be awarded a degree (B.Sc.) in the Royal University of Ireland in 1903, receiving second-class honours in geology and biology.

She was employed in the Natural History Division of the National Museum of Ireland in 1905, firstly as a Technical Assistant and later as an Assistant Naturalist. Stephens was a specialist in Porifera and Cnidaria. She published many monographs on the collections of the Natural History Museum and novel specimens deposited in the museum from various dredges. She also identified 34 species of sponge new to science from the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Stephens took part in the Clare Island Survey in 1909 and 1910, surveying the fresh and marine sponges as well as other marine invertebrates. She worked extensively with her fellow museum worker, Eileen Barnes, an artist who illustrated many of Stephens' publications.


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