Mary Andrews (geologist)
Mary K. Andrews (1854–1914) was an Irish geologist, notable as one of the first women to be active in this area. LifeBorn in Belfast, Mary Andrews was one of six children born to Jane Hardie and the chemist Thomas Andrews.[1] She was Honorary Secretary of the geological section of the Belfast Naturalists' Field Club (BNFC) after its establishment in 1893.[2] A friend and collaborator of Sydney Mary Thompson, Andrews photographed features of special interest for the British Association,[3] and curated the BNFC's local geological specimens.[1] Andrews was one of twelve women who presented papers at the women's section of the geological congress, as a part of the World's Congress Auxiliary of the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, in August 1893.[4] She represented Queen's College, Belfast and the BNFC at the 1907 centenary celebrations of the Geological Society.[5][6] Works
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