Mildred Adams Fenton (November 14, 1899 – December 7, 1995)[1] trained in paleontology and geology at the University of Iowa. She coauthored dozens of general science books with her husband, Carroll Lane Fenton, including Records of Evolution (1924), Land We Live On (1944), and Worlds in the Sky (1963).
Mildred Adams Fenton | |
---|---|
Born | 14 November 1899 Cedar County, Iowa |
Died | 7 December 1995 Iowa City, Iowa | (aged 96)
Scientific career | |
Fields | paleontology geology |
Institutions | University of Iowa |
Author abbrev. (botany) | M.A.Fenton |
Early life and education
Mildred Adams was born near West Branch, Iowa,[2] the daughter of Ollie M. Adams and Mary Ann Yetter Adams.[1] She graduated from the University of Chicago, where she met her husband Carroll Lane Fenton while they were both undergraduates.[3][4]
Selected publications
In addition to their scholarly contributions, the couple wrote fifty books on general science topics, and her photographs were often used as illustrations.[2] Unless otherwise indicated, Fenton was co-author on the following articles and books, with her husband Carroll Lane Fenton.
Scholarly works
- "Some Black River Brachiopods from the Mississippi Valley" (1922)[5]
- "Nortonechinus, a Devonian Echinoid" (1923)[6]
- The Stratigraphy and Fauna of the Hackberry Stage of the Upper Devonian (1925)[7]
- "A New Species of Schizophoria from the Devonian of Iowa" (1928)[8]
- "Notes on Several forms of Lichenocrinus from Black River Formations" (1929, solo author)[9]
- "Some Snail Borings of Paleozoic Age" (1931)[10]
- "Boring Sponges in the Devonian of Iowa" (1932)[11]
- "Orientation and Injury in the Genus Atrypa" (1932)[12]
- "Hail Prints and Mud-Cracks of Proterozoic Age" (1933)[13]
- "Algal Reefs or Bioherms in the Belt Series of Montana" (1933)[14]
- "Atrypae described by Clement L. Webster and related forms (Devonian, Iowa)" (1935)[15]
- "Burrows and Trails from Pennsylvanian Rocks of Texas" (1937)[16]
- "Belt Series of the North: Stratigraphy, Sedimentation, Paleontology" (1937)[17]
- "Archaeonassa: Cambrian Snail Trails and Burrows" (1937)[18]
- "Pre-Cambrian and Paleozoic Algae" (1939)[19]
General science books
Personal life
Mildred Adams and Carroll Lane Fenton married in 1921. The couple established a scholarship fund for Hopi students at Northern Arizona University.[4] She was president of the New Jersey and Iowa chapters of the Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America. She traveled extensively in her later years, including several trips to Australia and a visit to Russia.[2] Carroll died in 1969,[23] and she died in 1995, at the age of 96, in Iowa City.[3]
References
External links
- Flickr entry (with discussion on birth date)
- S. George Pemberton and James A. MacEachern (1994). "Carroll Lane Fenton and Mildred Adams Fenton: Pioneers of North American Neoichnology," Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces 3(2): 145–153.