Szalay has studied the cultural significance of tree kangaroos to New Guinean people, particularly in body adornment and accessories.[1] She has worked at the Australian Museum, in the anthropology and the mammalogy departments.[2][3][4] She undertook postgraduate study at the University of Sydney, where her thesis was entitled: Maokop : the montane cultures of central Irian Jaya : environment, society, and history in highland West New Guinea.[5] As part of her research she catalogued the archives held at the South Australia Museum of the missionaries Norman and Sheila Draper.[6] Szalay has written about religion in West Papua,[7] as well as the West Papuan independence movement.[8][9][10]
Szalay is married to the climate campaigner and explorer Tim Flannery.[11] They met when she joined his 1994 expedition to New Caledonia.[2] During the trip they collected Pleistocene fossil fauna from several places, including Kelangurr Cave.[12]
Szalay's father was Hungarian and a pilot in the Second World War.[13]
Eponym
Whilst a member of the 1994 expedition with Tim Flannery and Indonesian scientist Boeadi, a new species of cuscus was described for the first time and named after Szalay.[14] The cuscus is only found in the island of Gebe in the North Moluccas.[15] The Gebe cuscus (Phalanger alexandrae) lives between sea level and 300m and is endemic to the island in inhabits.[16]
References
^Jackson, Stephen (Stephen M.) (2010). Kangaroo : portrait of an extraordinary marsupial. Vernes, Karl. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin. p. 45. ISBN978-1-74175-903-7. OCLC652432066.
^Taylor, Bron Raymond; Kaplan, Jeffrey; Hobgood-Oster, Laura; Ivakhiv, Adrian J.; York, Michael (2008). The Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature. New York: Continuum. p. 672. ISBN978-0-19-975467-0. OCLC634853866.
^Broek, Theo Van den; Szalay, Alexandra (1 June 2001). "Raising the Morning Star: Six months in the developing independence movement in West Papua". The Journal of Pacific History. 36 (1): 77–92. doi:10.1080/00223340123100. ISSN0022-3344. S2CID159676349.
^Kusumaryati, Veronika. "THE GREAT COLONIAL ROADS." Landscape Architecture Frontiers, vol. 5, no. 2, 2017, p. 137+. Gale Academic OneFile, Accessed 17 May 2020
^Ploeg, Anton (2007). "Revitalisation Movements among Me, Damal and Western Dani, Central Highlands, Papua, Indonesia". Zeitschrift für Ethnologie. 132 (2): 263–286. ISSN0044-2666. JSTOR25843102.
^Shuker, Karl. (2002). The new zoo : new and rediscovered animals of the twentieth century. Shuker, Karl. (New ed.). Thirsk: House of Stratus. p. 101. ISBN1-84232-561-2. OCLC59531459.
^Beolens, Bo. (2009). The eponym dictionary of mammals. Watkins, Michael, 1940-, Grayson, Michael. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 7. ISBN978-0-8018-9533-3. OCLC593239356.