Anning Green
Equally at home on the hills as in the boardroom, the Anning’s timeless design is for pioneers and urban adventurers.
Hand assembled in Switzerland and water resistant to 100m, with sapphire glass, it will take pretty much anything you care to throw at it.
Arabic numerals and large ‘compass’ pointers, make it easy to tell the time at a glance and high luminescence on both the pointer and the numbers mean you read it no matter what the conditions – whether night walking on the fells or flagging a cab in London.
Available with a Jet Black or Sunburst Blue dial in a stainless stee casel, as well as the Sunburst Green dial with black case, the Anning is modern, yet classic, and celebrates the pioneering work of Mary Anning.
A choice of straps are also available, an extra strap can be purchased for special price of £15 (usual price of £25) with any Anning order.
Specification
- Black PDV coated 316L stainless steel case
- Sunburst Green dial
- 42mm diameter
- Sapphire glass
- Arabic numerals with lume
- ‘Compass’ pointers with lume infill strip
- Sweep second hand with red ‘dip’ pointer
- Date marker
- Exhibition case back with sapphire glass
- Up to 100m water resistance
Movement
- Ronda R150
- Swiss-made automatic mechanical movement
- 28,800 beats per hour
- 25 jewels
- Nivaflex main spring
- 40-hour power reserve
- Incabloc anti-shock system
- Hours, minutes, central sweeping seconds, date
Who was Mary Anning?
Born in 1799 in Lyme Regis, Mary Anning helped her father Richard sell the fossils he gathered on the Dorset coast. When he died, she was just eleven, yet she and her brother Joseph took over the business.
In 1811 she uncovered the 17ft fossil of what would become known as an ichthyosaurus. 12 years later, she became the first person to unearth a complete plesiosaur skeleton – this became the holotype, which was used to describe the species and that scientists still refer to it today.
Despite her finds and advice given to scientists across Europe, whose papers relied heavily on her discoveries and interpretations, she received no credit – and it is only in recent years that her role as a pioneer has become clear.
At Winton we celebrate unsung British pioneers, which is why the Anning has joined our portfolio.