Today is Ada Lovelace day. In honor of her achievements as a woman in technology, a global blogging event is celebrating women in science and technology (2nd annual). (This was originally posted to my crafts-related blog as part of The Mad Scientists of Etsy).
Whenever the occasion to write a biography or a description of a scientist arises, I am always drawn to the life of Marie Curie. The daughter of a school teacher, she was one of those rare women in the late 1800s - educated and literate. She worked to pay her sister's way through school as her sister had helped her, she took a backseat to her husband Pierre Curie's scientific endeavors until his death, and she raised another Nobel winning woman scientist, Irene Joliet-Curie. Her intelligence and abilities became known after her husband's tragic death, proof that she was his partner and not his assistant. I always marveled at the pictures of early 20th century scientific meetings, Madame Curie sitting at the table among men like Einstein, reading or writing all the while, a stark contrast.
Marie Curie discovered radium and polonium, provided the mobile radiography (X-ray) units for the front during WWI, and died from the radiation produced by her discoveries. She gave her life to investigative endeavors (Her papers and notes from her laboratory are purported to still be too radioactive to be handled).
Though known for chemistry, Marie Curie proceeded her late husband as a Professer of Physics at the Sorbonne in France, a world famous institution at the time - the first woman to do so. She was also the Director of the Curie Laboratory at the University of Paris in the second decade of the 20th century, as well as founding the Radium Institute in collaboration with the Polish government and an award from President Hoover of the United States.
Marie Curie has two Nobel prizes to her name (the first scientist to achieve this, let alone a woman) - sharing one in Physics with her husband in 1903 and being the sole holder of the 1911 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
The Radium Institute has become the Maria Sklodowska-Curie Institute of Oncology in Warsaw, Poland, a leading research and treatment center. So her legacy of discovery lives on.
Marie Curie (Maria Sklodowska-Curie) 1867-1934 and beyond
For more pictures and award listings, see those uploaded to her Wikipedia entry
Alicia PhD
- Location
- New Hampshire, United States
- Birthday
- September 08
- Bio
- Alicia has a PhD in Experimental Pathology and, after having worked in a genetics lab for her dissertation, now edits scientific manuscripts full-time from the comfort of the White Mountains. Alicia is also a writer, contributing health commentary and articles on disease and anatomy to many online publishers. She upkeeps a number of blogs devoted to her interests in public health and science.
MY RECENT POSTS
- Time passing...
February 17, 2012 03:16PM - Calcium channels getting a
little love
April 04, 2011 01:28AM - Recommended Reading -
Hallmarks of Cancer
March 25, 2011 05:08PM - I'm not dead
March 20, 2011 12:28AM - Merry Christmas!
December 24, 2010 10:19AM
MY RECENT COMMENTS
- “No, I work with a
scientific editing company in
California, a
number of
freelance…”
February 17, 2012 04:18PM - “Alot of interesting
information - thank you,
Fay!”
February 17, 2012 03:25PM - “You may be interested in
the imaging studies they're
trying
to do in order to
obj…”
April 04, 2011 01:38AM - “I didn't run across the
Twitter feed until after he
was
found, but he had a
faceb…”
April 04, 2011 01:02AM - “I haven't flown since my
connecting flight at O'hare
caught
on fire at the gate
-…”
April 04, 2011 12:56AM
Alicia PhD's Links
- Series of Interest
- Fictional Evolution - a Narrative
- Alicia's Writing
- On Helium
- On Suite101
- Maeflowers - Health Science Liaison
- Links of Interest
- Public Citizen - Health Research Division
- Alliance for Human Research Protection

Salon.com
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