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  2. Eugenie Clark was born and raised in New York City. Her father, Charles Clark, died when Eugenie was almost two years old, and her mother, Yumico Motomi, later married Japanese restaurant owner Masatomo Nobu.

  3. Eugenie Clark (born May 4, 1922, New York, New York, U.S.—died February 25, 2015, Sarasota, Florida) was an American ichthyologist noted for her research on poisonous fishes of the tropical seas and on the behaviour of sharks.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Sep 16, 2023 · Eugenie Clark was born in the working-class neighborhood of Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Her parents lived in a tenement building on East 11th Street, where they raised their family. This area was known for its high population density, poverty, and diverse immigrant communities.

  5. Feb 26, 2015 · May 4, 1922: Eugenie Clark is born in New York. She is raised there by her mother, Yumico, who was of Japanese descent. Clark's American father, Charles Clark, died before Eugenie turned two.

    • Early Life and Education
    • From 'Dr. Clark' to 'The Shark Lady'
    • A Lasting Legacy

    Working to pay her way through Hunter College in the early 1940s, Clark studied ichthyology, the branch of biology devoted to the study of fish. Following graduate research in the South Pacific, she took a job at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, California. Scripps is where she learned to scuba dive, a skill that Clark used con...

    Clark discovered several fish species, among them Trichonotus nikii, a Red Sea sand diver named after her son Nikolas, and the Red Sea Moses sole (Pardachirus marmoratus), which produces a natural shark repellent. Her passion, however, was studying sharks and dispelling myths and fears about them through education. It was Clark who discovered that ...

    Eugenie Clark made her last dive in June 2014. She died on February 25, 2015, at the age of 92. She leaves a legacy that will inform her fellow scientists and ocean lovers for generations to come. On March 16, 2015, the U.S. Congress posthumously honored and recognized Dr. Clark for her efforts to understand and preserve the ocean realm.

  6. Known to the world as ‘Shark Lady’, Eugenie Clark was a pioneering marine biologist who made life-long contributions to the study of sharks and bony fish.

  7. May 4, 2022 · Famed marine biologist Eugenie Clark, or “Genie” as she was known to friends and family, was born in New York City on May 4, 1922. Her father, Charles Clark, died when she was just two years old, leaving her to be raised by her mother Yumiko.