Maura Scannell
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Mary J. P. "Maura" Scannell (1924–2011) was a leading Irish botanist.


Professional career

Scannell became Assistant Keeper of the Natural History Division of the National Museum, Ireland, 1949. Her special interest was the botany of Ireland, especially in the past. She was an expert in the identification of woods and charcoals, leading her to identify the material used in all the Irish harps in the National Museum as well as from archaeological sites. The
Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland The Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI) is a scientific society for the study of flora, plant distribution and taxonomy relating to Great Britain, Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man. The society was founded as the Botani ...
called her "an inspiration to generations of botanists" for her taxonomic knowledge of seeds and fibres as well as microfungi and algae. In 1970, she supervised the transfer of the National Herbarium from the National Museum in central Dublin to the National Botanic Gardens at Glasnevin. She was an active member of the Irish regional committee of the (now)
Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland The Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI) is a scientific society for the study of flora, plant distribution and taxonomy relating to Great Britain, Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man. The society was founded as the Botani ...
from 1963 to 1994. She was a judge in the Irish Young Scientists Exhibition from the 1960s. One of her most important contributions was in fostering a love of botany in others. She remained Head of the National Herbarium until she retired in 1989, but continued as an author, field botanist and visitor to the Herbarium.


Scientific legacy

Her very wide knowledge within botany, particularly of Ireland and the Herbarium collection, is illustrated in the diversity of publications that acknowledge her contribution or advice: a follow-up to a record of ''Salix hibernica'' in Ireland in 1963 records her contribution of information from the Herbarium indicating the tree's presence in Ireland substantially earlier, in the 1880s; Identifying the species of reeds in a print of an oil painting in 1996 led to its identification as an important post-Famine Irish landscape painting; Identification of wood and charcoal fragments for archaeological excavations. Over 200 scientific publications, books and floras are attributed to her, in addition to specimExpandens and field records deposited in the national Herbarium. The latter are among the largest contributions by any botanist. A new plant species was named after her in 2008, '' Sorbus scannelliana'' (Maura Scannell's Whitebeam). Scannell also supported the botanical publications of others. She assisted
Evelyn Booth Evelyn Mary Booth (1897–1988) was an Irish botanist, designer of the gardens at Lucy's Wood, and writer of ''The Flora of County Carlow''. She was described as "one of Ireland's most loved and respected botanists". Life Evelyn Mary Booth wa ...
to produce ''The Flora of County Carlow'' (1979), the first Irish county flora to be written by a woman.


Selected publications

* Scannell, MJP and Synnott, DM (1989) Sources for the Census Catalogue of the Flora of Ireland National Botanic Gardens, Ireland. ASIN: B000V9IBE2 * Webb, DA and Scannell, MJP (1983) Flora of Connemara and the Burren. Royal Dublin Society And Cambridge University Press, * * * * * * * * * Scannell, MJP (1972) Census Catalogue of the Flora in Ireland Paperback. Stationery Office. ASIN: B0006CRR94 pp 127 * Scannell, Mary J.P. and Synott, Donal M. 1972 ''Consus Catalogue of the Flora of Ireland.'' Dublin Stationery Office *


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Scannell, Maura 20th-century Irish botanists 1924 births 2011 deaths 20th-century Irish women scientists Irish women botanists