Ten Historic Female Scientists You Should Know
Before Marie Curie, these women dedicated their lives to science and made significant advances
- By Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian.com, September 20, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Lise Meitner (1878 – 1968)
When Lise Meitner finished school at age 14, she was barred from higher education, as were all girls in Austria. But, inspired by the discoveries of William Röntgen and Henri Becquerel, she was determined to study radioactivity. When she turned 21, women were finally allowed into Austrian universities. Two years of tutoring preceded her enrollment at the University of Vienna; there she excelled in math and physics and earned her doctorate in 1906. She wrote to Marie Curie, but there was no room for her in the Paris lab and so Meitner made her way to Berlin. There she collaborated with Otto Hahn on the study of radioactive elements, but as an Austrian Jewish woman (all three qualities were strikes against her), she was excluded from the main labs and lectures and allowed to work only in the basement. In 1912, the pair moved to a new university and Meitner had better lab facilities. Though their partnership was split up physically when she was forced to flee Nazi Germany in 1938, they continued to collaborate. Meitner continued her work in Sweden and after Hahn discovered that uranium atoms were split when bombarded with neutrons, she calculated the energy released in the reaction and named the phenomenon “nuclear fission.” The discovery—which eventually led to the atomic bomb (“You must not blame scientists for the use to which war technicians have put our discoveries,” Meitner would say in 1945)—won Hahn the Nobel Prize in 1944. Meitner, overlooked by the Nobel committee, refused to return to Germany after the war and continued her atomic research in Stockholm into her 80s.
Irène Curie-Joliot (1897 – 1956)
The elder daughter of Pierre and Marie Curie, Irène followed her parents’ footsteps into the lab. The thesis for her 1925 doctor of science was on the alpha rays of polonium, one of the two elements her mother discovered. The next year, she married Frédéric Joliot, one of her mother’s assistants at the Radium Institute in Paris. Irène and Frédéric continued their collaboration inside the laboratory, pursuing research on the structure of the atom. In 1934, they discovered artificial radioactivity by bombarding aluminum, boron and magnesium with alpha particles to produce isotopes of nitrogen, phosphorus, silicon and aluminum. They received the Nobel Prize in chemistry the next year, making Marie and Irène the first parent-child couple to have independently won Nobels. All those years working with radioactivity took a toll, however, and Irène died of leukemia in 1956.
Barbara McClintock (1902 – 1992)
While studying botany at Cornell University in the 1920s, Barbara McClintock got her first taste of genetics and was hooked. As she earned her undergraduate and graduate degrees and moved into postdoctoral work, she pioneered the study of genetics of maize (corn) cells. She pursued her research at universities in California, Missouri and Germany before finding a permanent home at Cold Spring Harbor in New York. It was there that, after observing the patterns of coloration of maize kernels over generations of plants, she determined that genes could move within and between chromosomes. The finding didn’t fit in with conventional thinking on genetics, however, and was largely ignored; McClintock began studying the origins of maize in South America. But after improved molecular techniques that became available in the 1970s and early 1980s confirmed her theory and these “jumping genes” were found in microorganisms, insects and even humans, McClintock was awarded a Lasker Prize in 1981 and Nobel Prize in 1983.
Dorothy Hodgkin (1910 – 1994)
Dorothy Crowfoot (Hodgkin, after her 1937 marriage) was born in Cairo, Egypt, to a pair of British archaeologists. She was sent home to England for school, where she was one of only two girls who were allowed to study chemistry with the boys. At 18, she enrolled in one of Oxford’s women’s colleges and studied chemistry and then moved to Cambridge to study X-ray crystallography, a type of imaging that uses X-rays to determine a molecule’s three-dimensional structure. She returned to Oxford in 1934, where she would spend most of her working life, teaching chemistry and using X-ray crystallography to study interesting biological molecules. She spent years perfecting the technique, for which she was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1964, and determined the structures of penicillin, vitamin B12 and insulin. In 2010, 16 years after her death, the British Royal Mail celebrated the 350th anniversary of the Royal Society by issuing stamps with the likenesses of 10 of the society’s most illustrious members, including Isaac Newton and Benjamin Franklin; Hodgkin was the only woman in the group.
Rosalind Franklin (1920 – 1958)
James Watson and Francis Crick get credit for determining the structure of DNA, but their discovery relied on the work of Rosalind Franklin. As a teenager in the 1930s, Franklin attended one of the few girls’ schools in London that taught physics and chemistry, but when she told her father that she wanted to be a scientist, he rejected the idea. He eventually relented and she enrolled at Cambridge University, receiving a doctorate in physical chemistry. She learned techniques for X-ray crystallography while in Paris, returning to England in 1951 to work in the laboratory of John Randall at King’s College, London. There she made X-ray images of DNA. She had nearly figured out the molecule’s structure when Maurice Wilkins, another researcher in Randall’s lab who was also studying DNA, showed one of Franklin’s X-ray images to James Watson. Watson quickly figured out the structure was a double helix and, with Francis Crick, published the finding in the journal Nature. Watson, Crick and Wilkins won a Nobel Prize in 1962 for their discovery. Franklin, however, had died of ovarian cancer in 1958.
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Comments (33)
I love you so much Rosalind Frankin.You made DNA images. So sorry you died ,may your soul rest in peace,R.I.P.
Posted by Izevbizua Deborah on January 29,2013 | 12:38 PM
You missed Emmy Noether, a world class mathematician. But don't worry. We mathematicians are used to being ignored. Even Alfred Nobel did it.
Posted by Don Fox on January 24,2013 | 01:44 PM
This is a lot of people
Posted by Riley Henderson on December 6,2012 | 12:45 PM
it was okay but it culd use more detail..
Posted by Jerrry on September 28,2012 | 03:03 PM
i love scince and i want to be a scientist peace
Posted by akasha on September 11,2012 | 04:30 PM
What about Hypatia the scientist from ancient Alexandria?
Posted by Ramona Schroeder on September 10,2012 | 07:01 AM
Mary Leakey? No? She could easy be number 11 06/02/1913 to 12/09/1996. Alas she is all to often forgotten by many also..
Posted by Jim on April 24,2012 | 06:49 PM
they R great rol mottles for kids :)(}-:
Posted by Girl3662 on March 31,2012 | 09:38 PM
Interesting. None of these ladies were major mathematicions Madame Currie's husband did her math work
Posted by J. Hall on March 12,2012 | 07:17 PM
Thank you for that list - I'm a middle school teacher and always looking for positive female role models to put up on the wall. It's really hard to find pictures of famous women (outside of the entertainment industry) so this gives me a start to keep searching, or maybe create some posters of my own.
Posted by Eric on March 12,2012 | 02:40 PM
This is only a small group of brilliant women.You should also explore the european female scientists.
Thank you for a great article.
Posted by Eva on March 9,2012 | 07:09 PM
I keep wondering how it happened that you were limited to ten.
Posted by Byron McAllister on January 9,2012 | 07:49 PM
I think you should consider Lynn Margulis
Posted by Manuel Sandoval Ríos on November 24,2011 | 07:25 AM
My belief in women's talents in all fields is very strong and proven. I wish to second the comment from Margaret Harper and ask the question: what can we do for women's achievements to be more prominent on a day to day basis?
Posted by Martine Benoit on October 20,2011 | 06:42 AM
Rosalyn Yalow is another overlooked winner of the Nobe prize.
Posted by Dan on October 7,2011 | 11:19 AM
The headline read: "Oxford Housewife Wins Nobel Prize" when Dorothy Hodgkin won her Nobel prize.
http://www.womeninscience.co.uk/bios.php?id=20&comments=0&action=show
Posted by SalG on October 5,2011 | 12:09 PM
I recommend the book "The Hidden Giants" for further research on the subject. It is available from amazon. It tracks the history of women in science back 4,000 years. Several hundred women are discussed in the book. For example, one of the first known women in science was En'Heduanna, the astronomer-priestess in Ur. She lived about 2334 BCE. She is also known as the world's first poet.
Posted by Sethanne Howard on October 4,2011 | 05:14 PM
In my own way, I have been working to boost awareness of Meitner's work, including choosing her to be profiled as "Scientist of the Decade" in the 1930s chapter of my high-school/college reference book, Physics: Decade by Decade (Twentieth-Century Science set, Facts On File, 2007).
In that profile, I note that I chose Meitner over other distinguished scientists, most notably Enrico Fermi, because Meitner's experiences were illustrative of the times as well as the major discoveries.
I first heard Meitner's name as a freshman physics major in college. It was not from a professor but rather from a young woman on a date who was quite proud of her distant cousin. Although she and I found other mates, I have come to know and admire her cousin, Lise Meitner.
Posted by Fred Bortz on October 3,2011 | 11:17 AM
Before it, I was knowing Marie Qurie a great scientist and a second time nobel lauriate. Thanks for other related information.
Posted by s s mishra on October 2,2011 | 05:51 AM
In your list, there are two women who spotted comets, and one who's only accomplishment seems to be translating someone else's work into English.
What about Henrietta Leavitt? "In 1893 she discovered the relationship between how bright a star is and how far it is from the earth. This was the basis for the pivotal work of astronomer Edwin Hubble. It was an accomplishment for which Leavitt received almost no recognition during her lifetime."
In my opinion, she should have been included in the list instead of one of the two comet-spotters or the translator.
Posted by Isabelle on September 30,2011 | 05:23 AM
What a wonderful article, thank you so much. I look forward to a day when women of achievement, in any field, will be mentioned in classrooms and not just in specialty articles or commemorative speeches.
Posted by Margaret Harper on September 29,2011 | 12:36 PM
What? You missed my favourite: Emmy Noether! She was very important in mathematics and in theoretical physics. Noethers theorem is a key theorem in my field.
Posted by Frank on September 29,2011 | 08:17 AM
Me too. *blushes*
Posted by Zytrock on September 28,2011 | 04:54 PM
Extraordinary women...Thank You-Merci for such interesting article.
Posted by Lucien Alexandre Marion on September 28,2011 | 01:08 PM
Thanks for an informative and much-needed article. Regarding the subtitle, however ("Before Marie Curie . . ."), note that many of these women did their work long after Marie Curie did hers - one is actually her daughter! Among Curie's many great accomplishments, one is to have become a symbol of the high achievement possible by women in science, which undoubtedly eased (only partially) the way for these women who came after her.
Posted by Kevin T. Keith on September 27,2011 | 03:29 PM
What of Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, co-credited with discovering the AIDS virus?
Posted by anarchic teapot on September 27,2011 | 11:44 AM
It's a shame that you didn't mention Ada Lovelace (1815-1852), often known as the World's First Computer Programmer.
Posted by Kathy on September 26,2011 | 01:16 PM
I'm a biased observer, seeing as how I am a public health student, but especially in America, I don't think any list of great women scientists is complete without Alice Hamilton. The combination of her excellent insight and intelligence and her compassion for the working people was a major driving factor in the foundation of occupational hygiene as a science which has saved countless lives in this country and around the world.
Posted by Joe on September 25,2011 | 11:34 PM
very interesting article, i think, that Hipatia, Rosalind Franklin and lynn Margulis most be considered in the list
Posted by Gerardo González Núñez on September 22,2011 | 03:17 PM
A great list, but what about Emmy Noether? She was primarily a mathematician, but made great contributions to theoretical physics.
Posted by Debbie on September 22,2011 | 02:45 PM
Excellent article. I have reproduced Rosalind Franklin's laboratory in 1/12th scale as part of my great scientist series.
Posted by linda guthertz on September 22,2011 | 12:48 PM
This is great! I really enjoyed reading about these women. If you'd like to see more photographs of women scientists who deserve some recognition, check out the Smithsonian's "Women in Science" set on the Flickr Commons: http://www.flickr.com/photos/smithsonian/sets/72157614810586267/ Best, Catherine Smithsonian Institution Archives
Posted by Catherine S on September 22,2011 | 10:38 AM
I only knew Marie Curie before the article.Thanks
Posted by Aden on September 22,2011 | 03:37 AM