Joan Wiffen
Joan Wiffen CBE (née Pederson; 4 February 1922 – 30 June 2009) was a self-taught New Zealand paleontologist known for discovering the first dinosaur fossils in New Zealand. Early lifeWiffen was born in 1922 and was brought up in Havelock North and the King Country.[1] She only had a very short secondary school education as her father believed that higher education was wasted on girls, resulting in her education opportunities being limited during her youth.[2] At the age of 16, Wiffen joined the Women's Auxiliary Air Force during World War II where she served for six years.[2] CareerIn 1975 Wiffen discovered the first dinosaur fossils in New Zealand in the Mangahouanga Valley in Northern Hawkes Bay. Her first discovery was the tail bone of a theropod dinosaur. Her later finds included bones from a hypsilophodont, a pterosaur, an ankylosaur, mosasaurs and plesiosaurs.[2] In 1999, Wiffen discovered the vertebra bone of a titanosaur in a tributary of the Te Hoe River.[3] The fossils Wiffen found are primarily held in a GNS Science collection. Honours and awardsWiffen was awarded an honorary DSc by Massey University in 1994.[4] In the 1995 New Year Honours, she was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to science.[5] In 2004, she won the Morris Skinner Award from the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.[1] In 2017, Wiffen was selected as one of the Royal Society Te Apārangi's "150 women in 150 words", celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand.[6] Personal lifeIn 1953 she married Pont Wiffen and they had two children. Joan Wiffen died at the age of 87 on 30 June 2009 in Hastings Hospital.[2] Further reading
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