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Myrtle E. Johnson

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Citizenship
  
United States

Field
  
Marine biology

Fields
  
Marine Biology

Myrtle E. Johnson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen77dMyr

Institutions
  
San Diego State University

Known for
  
Seashore Animals of the Pacific Coast

Died
  
17 August 1967, San Diego, California, United States

Alma mater
  
University of California, Berkeley

Books
  
Seashore Animals of the Pacific Coast

Institution
  
San Diego State University

Myrtle Elizabeth Johnson (1881 – 1967) was an American marine biologist, ascidiologist, and educator in California in the early 20th century. She was the first woman PhD faculty member at the San Diego State College (now San Diego State University) and was chair of the Biology department for two decades. Her major work, Seashore Animals of the Pacific Coast, published in 1927, was the standard descriptive text of intertidal species until Ed Ricketts's Between Pacific Tides was published in 1939. Ricketts considered Johnson's book "the vade mecum of marine biologists of the Pacific."

Contents

Biography

Johnson was born on June 4, 1881, in East Troy, Wisconsin to Marian Gray Johnson and Dr. Theodore F. Johnson. In 1887, the Johnson family moved to National City, south of San Diego, for the doctor's health. Johnson attended San Diego State Normal School (now San Diego State University), graduating with a teaching credential in 1901. She taught in elementary and junior high schools in south San Diego, Palomar, and the Los Angeles city schools, before matriculating at the University of California, Berkeley in 1904. Johnson received her B.S. in Math and Zoology in 1908, and an M.S. in Zoology (with a secondary teaching credential) in 1909. She worked as a research assistant to William Ritter at the Marine Biological Association in La Jolla (1909-1910) before continuing post-graduate study in Zoology, working with Dr. Harry Beal Torrey. She received her PhD (Zoology) in 1912.

While working as a high school biology teacher in Pasadena (1912-1921), Johnson began work (1915) on a study of intertidal species with another Pasadena high school biologist, Harry James Snook. They continued to work on the text after Johnson joined the faculty of San Diego State College in 1921. Johnson and Snook's Seashore Animals of the Pacific Coast was first published in 1927 and has been reissued in three editions (1935, 1955, 1967).

Johnson died on August 17, 1967 in San Diego.

Career

  • William Ritter
  • Ed Ricketts
  • Harry Beal Torrey
  • Harry James Snook
  • Professional Societies

  • Member and Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • Member and Fellow, California Academy of Sciences
  • Member and Fellow, San Diego Society of Natural History
  • Memberships

  • San Diego Fine Art Society
  • San Diego Zoological Society
  • Sierra Club
  • Audubon Society
  • Cooper Ornithological Society
  • National Parks Conservation Association (formerly National Parks Association)
  • Biological Photographic Association
  • University Women’s Club
  • National Education Association (Life member)
  • National Association for Research in Science Teaching (Life member)
  • Alpha Delta Gamma
  • References

    Myrtle E. Johnson Wikipedia