minouette, to science
@minouette@spore.social avatar

This is my hand-printed linocut portrait of chemistry trailblazer Marie-Anne Paulze Lavoisier (1758 – 1836), wife & collaborator of French scientist Antoine Lavoisier (1743 –1794).

Working closely together, they modernized & quantified chemistry & the scientific method, recognized & named oxygen & hydrogen, explained the role that oxygen plays in combustion, …

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CarveHerName, to random
@CarveHerName@mstdn.social avatar

, 5 Jun 1833, Ada Lovelace meets Charles Babbage, triggering their collaboration on the Analytical Engine.

Image by Sydney Padua

TheConversationUS, to science
@TheConversationUS@newsie.social avatar

It doesn’t add up:

Math teachers who believe women no longer face discrimination tend to be biased against girls’ ability in math. And effects of bias like this can snowball over time.


https://theconversation.com/math-teachers-hold-a-bias-against-girls-when-the-teachers-think-gender-equality-has-been-achieved-202921

golgaloth, to space
@golgaloth@writing.exchange avatar

Helen Sharman, the first British person in space, turned 60 today.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Sharman

WESCentenary, to random

Muriel Hind 1st woman motorcyclist in England starting c.1901. Competed in speed trials on 2, 3 & 4 wheels wearing Edwardian hat, veil, boots laced to knee, long coat & skirt. Test rider for Rex, 1910 they created Blue Devil bike for her b 27 May 1882 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muriel_Hind



KathyReid, to science

and - @scienceAU - not on - are running a about - you could go into the running to win $500 JB Hi-Fi Voucher:

https://www.research.net/r/STEM_Career_Survey

erinmikail, to opensource
@erinmikail@mastodon.social avatar

where are my not-men in ML at? I feel like every event I go to is a giant sausage fest. 🥲

Ferwen, to random Spanish
@Ferwen@mastodon.online avatar

Emily Dix was born , 1904. She initially studied all aspects of the Late Carboniferous biotas in South Wales, but soon, she realized that plant fossils also had considerable biostratigraphical potential https://paleonerdish.wordpress.com/2017/01/20/forgotten-women-of-paleontology-emily-dix/

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angie_techcafe, to infosec
davbatz, to random
@davbatz@mastodon.social avatar

Good Morning! On this day, (Thursday) May 11 in 1906 Jaqueline Cochran was born. She was an American pilot and business executive. She pioneered women's aviation as one of the most prominent racing pilots of her generation. She set numerous records and broke the sound barrier.

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vicgrinberg, (edited ) to space
@vicgrinberg@mastodon.social avatar

Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, who revolutionized our understanding of what stars & the Universe are made of, was born in 1900.

In 1926, she wrote what is considered the "undoubtedly most brilliant PhD thesis ever written in astronomy".

She continued in the same spirit - only to be denied a professorship (or even the a proper astronomer position). She finally became a professor at Harvard at 1956(!) & first woman to chair a department.

CarveHerName, to space
@CarveHerName@mstdn.social avatar

, 9 May 1922, the International Astronomical Union formally adopts Annie Jump Cannon's stellar classification system. It is still in use.

absolutspacegrl, to science
@absolutspacegrl@mastodon.social avatar

Today I learned the word ‘scientist’ was coined in 1834 to describe Mary Somerville, replacing the term ‘man of science’.

https://www.themarginalian.org/2016/12/26/mary-somerville-scientist/

meg, to random

Happy Rosalind Franklin Day 🧬

drcaberry, to random
@drcaberry@blacktwitter.io avatar
drcaberry, to random
@drcaberry@blacktwitter.io avatar
drcaberry, to random
@drcaberry@blacktwitter.io avatar
jai_oh, to tech

"My designs were so deceptively simple that it was easy for people to assume I just had easy problems, whereas others, who made super-complicated designs (that were technically unsound and never worked) and were able to talk about them in ways that nobody understood, were considered geniuses." -- Radia Perlman, the woman who developed the algorithm behind the Spanning Tree Protocol, an innovation that made today's Internet possible.

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absolutspacegrl, to space
@absolutspacegrl@mastodon.social avatar
renordquist, to random

I'm finding my home feed here to be getting more interesting, but also very male dominated.

I'll be following women and boosting women for some time to try to balance that.

madelineostrander, to science
DrLindseyFitzharris, to science

Marie Curie's notebooks, which are radioactive and must be stored in a lead-lined box in the Bibliothèque Nationale. Curie’s corpse is also radioactive. Her coffin is lined in an inch of lead. Both will remain radioactive for 1,500+ years.

More info: https://www.sciencealert.com/these-personal-effects-of-marie-curie-will-be-radioactive-for-another-1-500-years

#HistSci #ScienceMastodon #MedMastodon #science #scientist #HistoryOfScience #HistMed #WomenInStem #TIL #TheMoreYouKnow #WeirdHistory

pinetta, to opensource

Are you a with an interest in ? The project is looking for devs, designers, and community builders who are interested in contributing to a FOSS project and shaping both community and technical frameworks. Give us a follow and a shout!

Lockdownyourlife, to OSINT

The most apparent thing to me, y'all don't read the things said to myself, and others on this platform.

I have rhino skin at this point, but do you SEE what is being said?

Do you read it?

Do you KNOW what happens when you fling a death threat enough times?

Do you get told someone wants to unalive you simply for existing?

Men really do hate us.

Women, LGBTQIA, Black, Brown, Indigenous, Jewish, non-binary and other marginalized groups are humans.

We are not/not objects.

We are fully formed beings who live every day knowing you want to hurt us.

Imagine living in a world where your very existence sets people off.

infosec

lbozhilova, to random

I'm just a girl, standing in front of a seminar speaker, asking him a question because no other women in the audience have their hands up.

The confidence gap is real and it sucks. So I’ve gotten into the habit of jotting down potential Qs during talks, and making sure I try to get one in, even if they all seem a bit underwhelming. I'm yet to profoundly embarrass myself.

We can and must do better, not only in the audience, but also as speakers and moderators.

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