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Women in Science Composite Poster
available at-
AllPosters.com
Art.com
• who is in the poster?
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Women of Science Poster Series -
Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Rachel Carson, Marie Curie, Jane Goodall, Grace Hopper, Shirley Jackson, Mary Leakey, and Barbara McClintock
• biology posters
• marine/aquatic posters
• ecology posters
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Heroes of Science & Technology Poster Series
Marie Curie, Gertrude Elion, Lillian Gilbreth, Grace Hopper, Ellen Richards,
(& Archimedes, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Michael Faraday, Benjamin Franklin, Galileo, Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur)
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Sophie Blanchard, the widow of French ballooning pioneer Jean-Pierre Blanchard, was the first woman to pilot her own balloon and work as a professional balloonist. She performed all around Europe, even crossing the Alps; she lost consciousness several times on high altitude flights and conducted experiements with parachutes. Mme. Blanchard was also the first woman to be killed in an aviation accident when a fireworks display caused her balloon to fail.
b. 3-25-1778; France
d. 7-6-1819; Tivoli Gardens, Paris
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Madame Émilie du Chatelet-Lomont
b. 12-17-1706; France
d. 9-10-1749; complications of childbirth
Madame Émilie du Chatelet-Lomont was a mathematician, physicist and author. Einstein's famous equation for the energy of matter E=mc2 fits neatly with a principle recognised by Madame de Chatelet 150 years before Einstein in her book Institutions de Physique (“Lessons in Physics”), which she had prepared for her 13 year old son as a "Cliff Notes" study of the newest ideas of the time. She was also great friends with Voltaire, (with her husband's blessing) and translated Newton's Principia into French.
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Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, winner of the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, is regarded as one of the foremost scientists in the field of X-Ray crystallography studies of natural molecules.
b. 5-12-1910, Cairo; Egypt
d. 7-29-1994
• Women in Science composite poster
• Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, Nobel
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Gertrude Elion,
Biochemist
b. 1-23-1918; NYC
d. 2-21-1999, Chapel Hill, NC
Poster Text: “What greater joy can you have than to know what an impact your work has had on people’s lives? The thrill of seeing people get well who otherwise might have died cannot be described in words.” -Gertrude Elion
Shunning traditional trial-and-error methods for finding effective treatments, biochemist Gertrude Elion took an innovative "pathways" approach that relied on determining how cells use chemicals to reproduce and grow. Her research led to the development of drugs to combat several serious medical conditions, including leukemia, malaria, viral herpes, and AIDS.
• more health care practioners posters
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Sophie Germain was a French mathematician who became friends with Carl Friedrich Gauss.
b. 4-2-1776; France
d. 6-27-1831; breast cancer
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Astronomer Caroline Herschel (1750-1848), 1829, Giclee Print
available at-
AllPosters.com
Art.com
• astronomers posters
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Hypatia of Alexandria
b. c. 360 AD; Alexandria
d. c. 415; Alexandria- mob violence
Hypatia, a Neo-Platonic Greek philosopher, mathematician, astronomer, astrologist and teacher, may have been murdered by a mob because she was a pagan. Her death occured in the conflicts that erupted during the time Christianity was imposed as the state religion.
• Hypatia in Women of Science composite poster
• Hypatia of Alexandria
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Marie-Anne Pierette Lavoisier, drawing of Experiment on the Decomposition of Water, Giclee Print
1758-1836
available at-
AllPosters.com
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| Marie-Anne Pierette Lavoisier, artist and scientist, collaborated with her husband Antoine Lavoisier, considered 'father of modern chemistry' until his beheading in the French Revolution (for being a nobel and tax collector, not a chemist). She continued a salon for scientists after the Terror. |
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Augusta Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace
b. 12-10-1815; England
d. 11-27-1852
Ada Lovelace was the only legitimate daughter of Lord Byron. She received early training as a mathematician and is considered to have written the first computer program in her correspondence with Charles Babbage about his early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine.
• Ada, Countess of Lovelace
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Maria Goeppert-Mayer, (b. 6-28-1906; Silesia, d. 2-20-1972; San Diego, CA), a German born American physicist was awared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963 for the nuclear shell model of the atomic nucleus. She is only the second woman to win the Nobel physics prize, the other was Marie Curie.
• Maria Goeppert Mayer: Physicist
• M. Goeppert-Mayer; Physicist
• Women of Science composite posters
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Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, from a family of artists, studied insects and plants in great detail and then illustrated them with paints and engravings. She spent several years c. 1700, in Suriname, the Dutch colony in South America.
b. 4-2-1647; Frankfurt, Germany
d. 1-13-1717; Amsterdam
• women artists posters
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Maria Montessori - Global PathMarker Fine Art Print
“Within the child lies the fate of the future.”
b. 8-31-1870, Italy
d. 5-6-1952; The Netherlands
Creative Process
• Famous People in the Montessori movement posters
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Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) Giclee Print
b. 5-12-1820; Florence, Italy
d. 8-13-1910
available at-
AllPosters.com
Art.com
• mathematicians posters
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| Florence Nightingale loved mathematics and her study of mathematics helped her collect data and organize a record keeping system to calculate the mortality rate of soldiers in the hospital. |
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Antonia Novello, MD, Hispanic Heritage Wall Poster
b. 8-23-1944; Puerto Rico
available at-
Art.com
AllPosters.com
• Hispanic Heritage posters
• health posters
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Anne Pratt
b. 12-5-1806; England
d. 1893
Anne Pratt, a self taught botanist, was one of the best known botanical illustrators of the Victorian age.
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Ellen Richards was a chemist and is consided a founder of the science of ecology.
b. 12-3-1842; Dunstable, MA
d. 3-30-1911
Poster Text: "The quality of life depends upon the ability of society to teach its members how to live in harmony with their environment – defined first as family, then the community, then the world and its resources." Ellen S. Richards
Among the first women to formally work as a scientist, Ellen Swallow Richards profoundly impacted people's daily lives. A pioneer in the field of sanitary engineering, she also applied scientific principles to domestic life in creating the field of home economics.
• Ellen Swallow: The Woman Who Founded Ecology
• Women of Science composite poster
• food safety posters
• Heroes of Science & Technology posters
• Places Where Women Made History - National Park Service
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Margaret Thatcher, Photo Print
b. 10-13-1925; Granthan, Lincolnshire
Margaret Thatcher was trained as a chemist and worked on the team that developed soft serve ice cream - (isn't life just too poetic?)
available at-
AllPosters.com
Art.com
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