Elizabeth M. Harper (Liz) is an evolutionary biologist known for her work on molluscs. She is an honorary fellow of the
British Antarctic Survey and was accorded the title of Honorary Professor by the
University of Cambridge in 2019.
Education and career
Harper was born in
Ipswich, Suffolk.[citation needed] She has a B.A. (and M.A Cantab) from the University of Cambridge and earned her doctorate from the
Open University.[1] As of 2021, Harper is a professor at the
University of Cambridge, and a fellow of
Gonville and Caius college.[2] Harper has used the collections at the
Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences for her research, and she was made an honorary curator of the invertebrate paleontology in 2004, and has twice served as acting director of the museum.[3] In 2019, the University of Cambridge bestowed the title of Honorary Professor of Evolutionary Malacology on Harper.[4]
As of June 2023, Harper is the Director of Studies in Earth Sciences, as well as a College Lecturer,[5] at Gonville and Caius college.
Research
Harper's research focuses on molluscan biology and
biomineralization. Her early research used genome size in living organisms to infer genome size in fossils.[6] She has subsequently examined the process of biomineralization,[7] or how bivalves make cement,[8][9] how
pteropods repair their shells,[10] and the factors controlling the shape of shells in blue mussels[11] and oysters.[12] She has defined the factors controlling feeding on molluscs by examining drilling into shells,[13][14] and worked on a collaborative project that considered multiple areas of research to define the origins of bivalves.[15] Harper's research includes investigations into how different species of molluscs may respond to future changes in water chemistry,[16][17] most recently revealing how brachiopods are able to alter the thickness of their shell under conditions that would lead to increased dissolution of their shells.[18] She has lectured at
The Perse School on the origins of molluscs, and how shells can explain adaptions of organisms to the environment.[19]
In 1990, Harper received the President's Award from the
Palaeontological Association.[20] As of 2021, Harper is named an honorary fellow of the British Antarctic Survey.[21]
References
^"Professor Liz Harper". Caius College Website. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2021.