Women in STEM

Margaret Oakley Dayhoff

Margaret Oakley Dayhoff has been called the “mother and father of bioinformatics” as she was a pioneer of applying mathematics and computational methods to biochemistry.

Image: Wikimedia

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Sandrine Thuret

Scientists used to think that the adult brain didn’t change, but Dr. Sandrine Thuret has shown that new neurons are still formed.

Image Courtesy of Kings College London.

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Linda Morabito

March 9th is the anniversary of the announcement of the first discovery of extraterrestrial volcanic activity by astronomer Linda Morabito.

Image Courtesy of NASA.

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Sylvia Wiegand

Dr. Sylvia Wiegand has expanded a successful career in mathematics to also help promote other women working in math and academia.

Image Courtesy of University of Nebraska-Lincoln

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Margaret Chan

Dr. Margaret Chan has faced many challenges as the director-general of the World Health Organization.

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Michelle Buchanan

Michele Buchanan is hoping to change the world through her research into energy, and her work at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Image Courtesy of ORNL

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Lynn Margulis

Lynn Margulis’ first paper was rejected 15 times before it was finally published, but her theories of symbiogenesis made a huge impact.

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Claire Voisin

Dr. Claire Voisin is one of the world’s leading researchers in complex algebraic geometry.

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Margaret Knight

Margaret Knight nearly didn’t get credit for an invention that changed the world: the first machine made to create flat bottomed paper bags.

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