Katharine Fowler-Billings

Katharine (Kay) Fowler Billings (1902 – December 17, 1997) was an accomplished naturalist and geologist, married to Marland Pratt Billings who she met and fell in love with at Harvard while he was making a name for himself as a professor .[1]

She was raised in Boston, studied at Bryn Mawr College, and received further geological training in the Rocky Mountains. She received a PhD from Columbia University. Her "publication record ... includes fundamental geological descriptions of large areas in Wyoming, Sierra Leone, and New Hampshire."[2]

She was an environmental activist in New England.[2]

She was an Honorary Fellow of the New Hampshire Geological Society.[3][4]

The Marland Pratt Billings and Katharine Fowler-Billings Fund for Research in New England Geology was established to honor the contributions to "the study of the geology of New England" by Fowler-Billings and her husband.[5]

Katharine Fowler Billings died December 17, 1997, in Peterborough, New Hampshire. She was 95.

Early Life

As a young girl from age 7 to her college days Katharine spent every August living with a widow in Randolph, New Hampshire. Kay suffered from hay fever which her doctor recommended would get better if she visited the White Mountains. This led her into finding a great attachment to nature and questioning aspects of it. Kay always wanted to answer, Why there were mountains, why rocks were formed and why the mountains differed so much from one coast to the other.[6]

Works

The geologists who worked at the White Mountains found that the dense vegetation made it almost impossible for their work to be conducted. The Billings investigated all the streams studying the outcropping and exposed rocks. They mapped out Mount Washington which gave us a great understanding how the complex structural geology of the White Mountains. [7]

A partial list of books:

Honorary Achievements

The Billings Fund was established in 1996 just a year before Katharine's death to honor the hard work of the Billings. This fund was established to encourage fieldwork and research through Grant Programs.[8]

References

  1. Boardman, Julie. When Women meet Mountians. p. 134-136. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  2. 1 2 Frost, C. D. (2002-06-01). "Katharine Fowler-Billings: Pioneering woman field geologist trained in the Rocky Mountains". Rocky Mountain Geology. 37 (1): 99–102. doi:10.2113/gsrocky.37.1.99. ISSN 1555-7332. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  3. "Marland P. Billings and Katharine Fowler-Billings Honored by the New Hampshire Geological Society". The Granite State Geologist. December 1992. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
  4. Eckel, Edwin Butt (1982). The Geological Society of America: life history of a learned society. Memoir / Geological Society of America. Boulder, Colo: Geological Society of America. ISBN 081371155X.
  5. "The Marland Pratt Billings and Katharine Fowler-Billings Fund for Research in New England Geology". New England Intercollegiate Geological Conference. Retrieved 2013-11-04.
  6. Boardman, Julie. Whem Women And Mountains Meet. pp. 132–135. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  7. Boardman, Julie. When Women and Mountains Meet. p. 135.
  8. http://w3.salemstate.edu/~lhanson/NEIGC/Billings.html


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