The White family came to Australia in 1955 and from 1956 until the 1980s Mary White was a consultant to the Bureau of Mineral Resources in Canberra, reporting on field collections of plant fossils and producing 55 BMR Records. She also worked part-time as a consultant to mining companies, while raising five children. As a Research Associate of the Australian Museum in Sydney since 1975 she has curated at the plant fossil collections, establishing a fully documented research collection of 12,000 specimens and writing scientific papers on her discoveries in the collection. This work showed her that there was no book which presented the big, interdisciplinary, picture of the evolution of a continent and its flora through time, and inspired The Greening of Gondwana. (First published in 1986 by Reed Books; Third Edition, published by Kangaroo Press/Simon & Schuster, in June 1998). Since 1984, Mary White has been a full-time writer and lecturer, presenting her interests in the prehistoric world and the evolution of the Australian continent and its biota to the enjoyment of everyone interested.
A book on the fossil record and semi-precious gemstones - The Nature of Hidden Worlds (re-released as Reading the Rocks: Time in Our Hands) - and four children's books followed The Greening of Gondwana. An account of how Australia became the driest vegetated continent, After the Greening: The browning of Australia was published by Kangaroo Press in 1994 and won the Eureka Prize. Listen ... Our Land is Crying, on the Australian environment, its problems and solutions, followed in September 1997. Its companion volume Running Down - Water in a Changing Land- was launched in October 2000 by Dr Graham Harris, Chief of CSIRO Land and Water. It covers palaeodrainages, ancient river systems, what our rivers were like at the time of European settlement, and how they are today, groundwater and all aspects of Australia's most precious resource. Listen and Running Down explain how the geological history of the continent can explain many of the problems that European-style land and water use have caused. The Greening of Gondwana, After the Greening, Listen and Running Down form a four part saga - a background to understanding why much of our current land and water use is unsustainable. Macquarie University granted Mary White a Doctor of Science degree in recognition of her contributions to science through her books in 1995. The Queensland University of Technology granted her the degree of Doctor of the University in 1999. Also in 1999, she received the Riversleigh medal "for excellence in promoting understanding of Australian prehistory". Running Down was short-listed for the Eureka Prize in 2001. Mary owns and runs The Falls Forest Retreat, at Johns River, southwest of Port Macquarie.
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