Thora Whitehead Explained

Thora Whitehead
Birth Date:27 January 1936
Birth Place:Chile
Death Place:Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Known For:Conchology

Thora Patricia Whitehead (27 January 1936 – 30 September 2021) was an Australian scientific collector and malacologist. She collected more than 200,000 shell specimens which are now held in the Queensland Museum.

Life and work

With Kevin Lamprell, Whitehead co-wrote the two-volume Bivalves of Australia. She also edited Lamprell's book, Spondylus: Spiny oyster shells of the world, in 1986.

Whitehead spent over 50 years collecting shells, particularly along the coast of Queensland. She found specimens in mangrove forests and on beaches, rocky outcrops and coral reefs.[1]

In the process of photographing the specimens prior to acquisition of Whitehead's extensive shell collection by the Queensland Museum, its curator John Healy discovered a new species. He named it Amoria thorae in her honour.[2] [3]

Personal life

Born in Chile in 1936,[4] Whitehead died in Brisbane in 2021 aged 85. She was survived by John, her husband of 56 years, and three children.[5]

Legacy

A number of species were named in her honour, including Amoria thorae, Callocardia thorae, Conus whiteheadae, Morula whiteheadae, Nassarius whiteheadae and Terebra whiteheadae.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2021-10-11. New species of mollusk discovered by museum curator. 2021-12-05. phys.org. en.
  2. Healy. John. 2021. A new species of Amoria (Gastropoda, Volutidae, Amoriinae) from the mid-east coast of Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum – Nature. 62. 1–10. 10.17082/j.2204-1478.62.2020.2019-02. 213031341 . free.
  3. Web site: 2021-10-11. Shell-shocking rare new species discovered. 2021-12-05. Scimex. en.
  4. Web site: BEMON: V & W. 2021-12-05. www.bemon.loven.gu.se.
  5. Web site: 2021-10-13. WHITEHEAD, Thora Patricia. 2021-12-05. My Tributes. The Courier-Mail. en.
  6. Web site: Thora P. Whitehead Shellers From the Past and Present. 2021-12-05. www.conchology.be. en.