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Illustration by Gertrude Mary Woodward 1910

My Work Log

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10/6/19 - copied article into sandbox for editing. Researched databases for information.

10/28/19- scoured BC library database for information on Woodward. Did not find anything, will keep looking. However I did find several pictures of sketches Woodward illustrated on Creative Commons, so I am pretty sure they are acceptable. 1 hr work time. P.S. I think I may have erased my logs from last week, I am not sure what I did to erase it but I posted a graphic by Woodward.

11/3/19- Posted my contribution to the main page and published it. I included the image and the proper citation. Yeeehaaaa!!! We did it!!!

Heather's Comments

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10/2- This is how the Sandbox should start looking. Be sure to watch the video in Introduction to Week 5 if you haven't yet. What did you notice about "Gertrude Mary Woodward" page? What could you improve? Use "Evaluate Wikipedia" to help you figure out what needs to be improved in your article. Are the sources below new ones you've found? Update this page every week, please.  :)

10/13- Great! What have you found about her? What specifically are you planning to update?

10/31- Okay, add the photo and a citation for it. Add anything else (wikilinks?) that you find by Sunday. It's looking good.

Article I'm Editing (pasted)

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Gertrude Mary Woodward

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search

"Gertrude Woodward" is also the name of a character in the Victorian novel The Three Clerks

Woodward's illustrations of two catfish species, 1908

Gertrude Mary Woodward (1854–1939) was a British scientific illustrator. The daughter of geologist Henry Bolingbroke Woodward and sister of illustrator Alice Woodward, she illustrated many palaeontological works for the Natural History Museum, London and was esteemed by her peers for the accuracy and quality of her watercolour work. She illustrated the famous Piltdown man fossils and other works by Arthur Smith Woodward (unrelated), as well as works by zoologist Ray Lankester. She often created illustrations for the still published, earth science journal co-founded by her father, titled Geological Magazine. [1]

References

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  1. ^ Ewing, Susan, 1954-. Resurrecting the shark : a scientific obsession and the mavericks who solved the mystery of a 270-million-year-old fossil. New York. ISBN 9781681773926. OCLC 981759896.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)