Show
775 citations
related to Women in science
Show
775 citations
related to Women in science as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Thesis
Caitlin Marie Milera
(2022)
Ms. Pearl Irma Young: “Raising Hell” for Women in STEM Fields and Women at NASA, 1914 – 1968.
(/isis/citation/CBB208090114/)
Article
Ivoni de Freitas-Reis; Beatriz Gatti de Castro
(2022)
Marguerite Catherine Perey (1909-1975): The Discovery of Francium and the Election of the First Woman to the French Academy of Sciences.
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
(pp. 302-309).
(/isis/citation/CBB585561993/)
Article
Marelene Rayner-Canham; Geoff Rayner-Canham
(2022)
Sir William Ramsay: Pioneering Advocate for Woman Chemists.
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
(pp. 296-301).
(/isis/citation/CBB438230091/)
Article
Howard D. Dewald
(2022)
Development of Chemistry at Ohio University and Its First Women Graduates.
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
(pp. 281-289).
(/isis/citation/CBB073509380/)
Article
Anne-Lise Rey
(2021)
Présentation : l’épistémologie inventive d’Émilie Du Châtelet.
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
(pp. 235-263).
(/isis/citation/CBB995918149/)
Article
Martin Bush
(2021)
Mary Proctor: An astronomical popularizer in the shadows.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 49-72).
(/isis/citation/CBB332924458/)
Article
Emma Gleadhill
(2021)
“For I Asked Him Men's Questions”: Late Eighteenth-Century British Women Tourists’ Contributions to Scientific Inquiry.
Eighteenth-Century Life
(pp. 158-177).
(/isis/citation/CBB555734121/)
Book
Ashley Jean Yeager
(2021)
Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond: The Life of Astronomer Vera Rubin.
(/isis/citation/CBB215194288/)
Multimedia Object
Galina Limorenko; Anna Reser; Leila McNeill
(2021-07-16)
Anna Reser and Leila McNeill, "Forces of Nature: The Women Who Changed Science" (Frances Lincoln, 2021).
New Books Network Podcast.
(/isis/citation/CBB905200643/)
Article
Stella V. F. Butler
(2021)
Two Nobel laureates in conversation: Robert Robinson listens to Dorothy Hodgkin's account of her life scientific.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 537-556).
(/isis/citation/CBB350088485/)
Book
Camilla Erculiani; Eleonora Carinci
(2021)
Letters on Natural Philosophy: The Scientific Correspondence of a Sixteenth-Century Pharmacist, with Related Texts.
(/isis/citation/CBB774516265/)
Book
Anna Reser; Leila McNeill
(2021)
Forces of Nature: The Women Who Changed Science.
(/isis/citation/CBB438058095/)
Book
Gelbart, Nina Rattner
(2021)
Minerva's French Sisters: Women of Science in Enlightenment France.
(/isis/citation/CBB005750553/)
Article
Lindsay Smith Zrull
(2021)
Women in Glass: Women at the Harvard Observatory during the Era of Astronomical Glass Plate Photography, 1875–1975.
Journal for the History of Astronomy
(pp. 115-146).
(/isis/citation/CBB136067482/)
Book
Anna K. Sagal
(2021)
Botanical Entanglements: Women, Natural Science, and the Arts in Eighteenth-Century England.
(/isis/citation/CBB259998433/)
Book
Walter Isaacson
(2021)
The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race.
(/isis/citation/CBB677514543/)
Book
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
(2021)
The Disordered Cosmos: A Journey into Dark Matter, Spacetime, and Dreams Deferred.
(/isis/citation/CBB612612757/)
Book
Tom Sharpe
(2021)
The Fossil Woman: A Life of Mary Anning.
(/isis/citation/CBB900889395/)
Article
Ben Harris
(2021)
Eugenics, social reform, and psychology: The careers of Isabelle Kendig.
History of Psychology
(pp. 350-376).
(/isis/citation/CBB708695182/)
Article
Barbara A.R. Mohr
(2021)
Clementine Helm Beyrich (1825–1896), the unusual case of a woman popularizer of the geosciences during the nineteenth century in Central Europe.
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 84-101).
(/isis/citation/CBB421993758/)
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