- references
List of members of the National Academy of Sciences this really needs to get broken up! (done)
Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research
- Helen Hay Whitney Foundation (HHW) / User:Lquilter/HHW
- Jon Beckwith - "But my biggest story of an overlooked scientist is about a pro-feminist, anti-racist Jewish man, not a woman. Jon Beckwith's lab was the first to "isolate" functional genes (the lac operon), yet he was likely overlooked for a Nobel Prize after giving his Lily Young Investigator Award prize money to the Black Panther Defense Fund. (1969 ISOLATION OF PURE LAC OPERON DNA by SHAPIRO J, MACHATTI.L, ERON L, IHLER G, IPPEN K, BECKWITH J; NATURE 224 Pages: 768-&) From: Phoebe Lostroh, Colorado College | May 19, 2010" (nature)
- Nipam Patel
Norbert Perrimon (User:Lquilter/drafts/Norbert Perrimon)
- Murray Stein (draft) (NYT)
- Harold Rauch (draft) ...
- google scholar ...
- Hampshire Gazette obituary. ...
- different rauch: Stanford alum. Women in Psychology: A Bio-Bibliographic Sourcebook By Agnes N. O'Connell, Nancy Felipe Russo, p.42. ...
- Dorothy D Greenhouse (1984) Holders of inbred and mutant mice in the United States: including the rules table 3 ...
- A study of organ patterns in mice / Harold Rauch - 1947
- RAUCH, HAROLD, b New York. NY, Oct 13 ... Mailing Add: Dept of Zool Univ of Mass Amherst MA 01002 ... American Men and Women of Science. . Biology, 1977 - Page 679
- 1950 PhD / Brown Alumni Magazine, 18 Aug 2010. d. Feb 10 2010. "He was hired by UMass Amherst as its first geneticist in biological sciences and remained on the faculty until his retirement in 1990. During his tenure he made significant research contributions related to phenylketonuria (PKU) and Wilson's disease. He enjoyed gardening and making alabaster sculptures."
- Rauch, Harold (Zoology) 1951 . Instructor in Zoology 1951; Assistant Professor 1953; Associate Professor 1959; Professor 1962. UMA faculty & staff collection @ SCUA
- "After the war ended, he chose to pursue his early interest in genetics, which was an emerging science. He earned a master of science at the University of Illinois and received his doctorate in genetics at Brown University in 1950. The University of Massachusetts hired him as their first geneticist in biological sciences and he remained a member of their faculty until his retirement in 1990." http://ns.gazettenet.com/print/262147
- The Development of the Hair in the Mouse Under Normal and Experimental Conditions / Author Harold Rauch / Publisher Brown University, 1950
- Cynthia Ahearn
- Michèle Barrett (sociologist)
- Maria Gurova - Bulgarian archaeologist; notable for her research on Neolithic usage of the so-called Balkanic Flint material
- Genevieve von Petzinger - Canadian anthropology student (University of Victoria); notable for her studies of prehistoric cave art throughout France; discovered a veritable Ice Age language, consisting of 26 characters found over many cave sites across France; international acclaim for her recent work
- Mary Wharton (October 12, 1912 - 1991) - American botanist; Rubus whartoniae named after her; papers are at the University of Kentucky Special Collections; [1]; ()
- Maud Menten and Katharine Blodgett. Jocelyn Bell Burnell.
- Jennifer Doudna: "Jennifer Doudna was the first person to get catalytic RNA to make more RNA instead of break RNA apart. 9 out of 10 people would say it was...Gerald Joyce. But his paper came out later the same year. From: eagle eye for women's work | May 19, 2010"
- Nettie Stevens - "lso, TH Morgan argued for years against sex chromosomes while his former student at Bryn Mawr, Nettie Stevens demonstrated them very clearly. Yet Morgan gets the credit because his lab (I believe it was his wife) isolated the white-eyed fly and figured out its genetics. Stevens used cytological evidence for a mixed size pair of chromosomes where the male always had the small one of the set, in a whole range of insects." (nature)
- Annie C. Y. Chang - "I've always thought it's a shame that we don't remember Annie C. Y. Chang more explicitly when we discuss recombinant plasmids used for cloning. There's a reason those plasmids are called "pACYC..." so there's some herstory. http://jb.asm.org/cgi/reprint/134/3/1141" (nature)
Ethel Brown Harvey
- women scientists - HHMI investigators: Kristi S. Anseth, Ruth Lehmann, Barbara J. Meyer, Xiaowei Zhuang, Erin M. Schuman, Yixian Zheng, Helen Piwnica-Worms, Sue Lindquist, Elaine Fuchs, Nancy Bonini, Daphne Preuss, Erin O'Shea, Celeste Simon
- missing women ornithologists (from Brewster Medal)
- missing women paleontologists
- userified pages
african americans in science[edit]
- inventors & other scientists
- biologists
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- geneticists
- biochemists
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- entomologists
- mathematicians
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notable scientists from women's bio dict[edit]
- notable women scientists from bio dict
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- Harriet Boyd Hawes
- Marcia Keith ... physicist cwp
- Elizabeth Isis Pogson Kent
- Helen Dean King - needs more
- Christine Kirch, b. circa 1696 - May 6, 1782, was a German astronomer. "Christine Kirch worked mainly in the background and supported her father, her mother, her brother, and later other astronomers at Berlin in calculating calendars and in carrying out astronomical observations. The daughter of the astronomer Gottfried Kirch and his second wife, Maria Kirch, and the sister of the astronomer Christfried Kirch, Christine Kirch was educated in astronomy by her parents. She assisted them in their astronomical observations during her childhood. It is reported that Christine Kirch, as a child, was mainly responsible for taking the time (or measuring time intervals by using a pendulum). When she was older, she was introduced to calendar making. Christine Kirch assisted first her mother and later her brother in calculating various calendars. Until 1740, she did not receive a regular salary for her contributions, but only occasionally small donations from the Berlin Academy ... " Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomy
- Maria Winkelmann Kirch
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- Dorothea Klumpke Roberts - love her eyes
- Salpe - One example of such a midwife is Salpe of Lemnos, who wrote on women’s diseases and was mentioned several times in the works of Pliny. ( Ralph Jackson, Doctors and Diseases in the Roman Empire (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988), p. 97 - also in Dinner Party / Judy Chicago )
- Lucy Say - "Lucy Way Say was a groundbreaker, the first woman elected to join the elite membership of The Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, and an artist and scientist specializing in the little known fields of Conchology (the study of shells) and Malacology (the study of mollusks & shelled organisms). Born and raised a Quaker she trained as an artist studying at the Fretageot School, in hopes of obtaining employment as a teacher. She continued her studies as a pupil of the well known Naturalist and Painter John James Audubon and soon became a talented colorist. On her way to join the utopian society of New Harmony, IN. she met and married Thomas Say, who was often referred to as The Father of Conchology. Lucy and Thomas worked together until Thomas’ death at age 47 from typhoid fever in 1834. Lucy illustrated the specimens in Thomas’s book American Conchology. Heart broken, Lucy lived out her life helping to educate others." -- http://ahtheatre.org/america/home/lucy-say
- Ellen Churchill Semple - stub
- Louise-Anastasia Serment
- Jane Sharp
- Jennie Arms Sheldon, Jennie Marie Arms Sheldon, Jennie Maria Arms Sheldon. 1852-1938. amcent.mass.edu
- Annie Trumbull Slosson
- Emilie Snethlage
- Julia Warner Snow ... um ... Smith Alumnae News, 1927. Julia W. Snow '88. Botanist.
- Mary Somerville
- Sophia, electress of Hanover
- Sophia Charlotte, Queen of Prussia
- Sotira
- Nettie Maria Stevens
- Isabelle Stone, 1868-1944 CWP
- Ella Church Strobell
- Lorenza Strozzi
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20th century women in physics[edit]
- Astrophysics
- Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
- Condensed Matter Physics
- Cosmic Rays
- Crystallography
- Distinguished Public Service
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- Contributions to Medicine
- Education and the Profession
- DeWitt-Morette, Cecile
- Franz, Judy
- Jackson, Shirley
- Keith, Marcia
- Laird, Elizabeth
- Maltby, Margaret
- Meyer, Kirstine
- Phillips, Melba
- Stone, Isabelle
- Whiting, Sarah
- Xie, Xide (Hsi-teh Hsieh)
- Fluid Dynamics
- Fluid Dynamics and Plasma Physics
- Geophysics
- Materials Science
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- Mathematical Physics
- Nuclear Physics
- Ajzenberg-Selove, Faye
- Brooks, Harriet
- Curie, Marie Sklodowska
- Ericson, Magda
- Gates, Fanny
- Gleditsch, Ellen
- Goldhaber, Gertrude Scharff
- Hayward, Evans
- Joliot-Curie, Irene
- Karlik, Berta
- Koller, Noemie Benczer
- Mayer, Maria
- Meitner, Lise
- Meyer-Schutzmeister, Luise
- Noddack, Ida Tacke
- Perey, Marguerite
- Phillips, Melba
- Way, Katharine
- Wu, Chien Shiung
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