By Mary Anning Rocks

Published: Friday, 10 June 2022 at 12:00 am


Mary Anning was a pioneering palaeontologist and fossil collector. She was born in 1799 in Lyme Regis, in the southwest English county of Dorset.

Lyme Regis is part of what is now called the Jurassic Coast, where discoveries are still being made to this day.

Her lifetime was filled with incredible firsts. Yet, what is so remarkable about Mary Anning was, not only was she an early pioneer, she was also a scientist with a huge capacity to understand the fossilised remains she discovered.

But because she was from a poor working-class background and struggled for most of her life with poverty, she has been forgotten and left out of our history books.

Yet without a formal education, her discoveries and ideas about the first ever Ichthyosaurs and Plesiosaurs to be discovered became the catalyst that changed the way we think about the origins of our planet and how life evolved on it.


Even now a hundred and seventy-five years after her death, many books still fail to list her as one of the greatest palaeontologists of our time.

Her name has been eradicated from the annals of history and her achievements unacknowledged and unknown because Anning was an uneducated, working-class woman and, subsequently, an outsider to polite society and the scientific community.

Anning lived at a time when women were not allowed to vote, own their own property, or attend university.


When was Mary Anning born?

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Mary Anning was baptised on the 27th June 1799.

Mary was born in Lyme Regis on the 21st May 1799 to a cabinetmaker and amateur fossil collector Richard Anning and his wife, Mary Moore, known as Molly. She was baptised on the 27th June 1799 in Lyme Regis.

The family relied on the sale of fossils collected from seaside cliffs near their home along England’s Channel coast as a source of income.

Mary was born when George III was the King of England and the war was still raging between the British and French.

Records are not clear, but it looks like Mary had nine or ten siblings. Only Mary and her older brother, Joseph, survived to adulthood.


Did Mary Anning get struck by lightning?

In 1800 whilst watching a travelling circus that had come to the town, a storm blew in off the coast. Taking shelter from the rain under a tree a lightning bolt struck Mary.

She was 15 months old and the three older girls taking care of her all died; but Mary’s parents managed to revive her by laying her in a bath of water.


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