Magnificent Minds: 16 Pioneering Women in Science and Medicine

Magnificent Minds: 16 Pioneering Women in Science and Medicine

By Pendred E. Noyce

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Winner of:
National Science Teachers Foundation/Children's Book Council, Outstanding Science Trade Book Award

Full of the inspirational stories girls need for exploring a future in science

Did you know that Florence Nightingale pioneered the use of statistics in public health? That Marie Curie is still the only person to have won the Nobel Prize in both physics and chemistry—and the only winner whose daughter also won a Nobel Prize? That in the 17th century, the most accomplished scholar in mathematical astronomy was a Polish woman, Maria Cunitz? That the pysicist who first explained nuclear fission was a woman, Lise Meitner?That two of the pioneers of computer science were women, Ada Lovelace and Grace Hopper? For centuries, women have risen above their traditional roles to pursue new understanding of the natural world. This book, which grows out of an exhibit at the Grolier Club in New York, introduces the lives, sayings, and dreams of sixteen women over four centuries and chronicles their contributions to mathematics, physics, chemistry, astronomy, computer science, and medicine. Sweeping and inspirational, this book should be read by all girls and young women who share curiosity about the world and the dream of making a difference.
Publisher: Tumblehome Learning, Inc.
ISBN-13: 9781943431250
ISBN-10: 1943431256
Published on 9/1/2016
Binding: Paperback
Number of pages: 180

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