Breaking Their Silence Women on the Frontline of the Poaching War from KDC Films on Vimeo.
Misplaced Lens Cap
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KIROKAZE
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies

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Discoholic 🪩
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Origami Around

#extradirty
hello vonnie
trying on a metaphor
Cosimo Galluzzi

@theartofmadeline
todays bird
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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Not today Justin
Today's Document
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Breaking Their Silence Women on the Frontline of the Poaching War from KDC Films on Vimeo.
men: *decided women weren’t allowed attend schools, study sciences, or have access to higher education* men: well if women are so smart then how come there aren’t many contributions from women in history huh
This post means well, but still erases women’s contributions in the same way men have. The truth is that women have made so many contributions to history and science despite men denying them access, but that men have either taken credit for those accomplishments or, when they couldn’t, completely divorced that accomplishment from the woman so that no one remembers them.
In fact, this happens so often that there’s even a name for it. It’s called the Matilda Effect which is defined as “the systematic repression and denial of the contribution of woman scientists in research, whose work is often attributed to their male colleagues” but which applies to other fields as well and goes doubly for women of color. How about just a few (certainly nowhere near all) women who contributed to science? And this is just science, not even history in the larger sense.
Margaret Hamilton - Lead programmer on the Apollo project, wrote the code to take us to the moon
Hedy Lamarr - actress and inventor of wifi
June Mathas, Frances Marion, Anita Loos, Lorna Moon - all silent film directors, in fact about 50% of films from 1911-1925 were directed by women
Annie Jump Cannon - developed first stellar classification system and classified nearly 400,000 stars, more than any other person ever
Lise Meitner - research paved the way for the discovery of nuclear fission, colleagues refused to credit her help, she received no credit while they were given a Nobel prize
Grace Hopper - computer scientist who created the first compiler
Rita Levi-Montalcini - Italian neuroscientist who won a Nobel Prize for her discovery of nerve growth factor
Melba Roy Moutan - mathematician who led a team of mathematicians at NASA, nicknamed ‘Computers’ for their number processing prowess
Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Fran Bilas and Ruth Lichterman - the primary programers of ENIAC, the first general purpose computer
Joyce Jacobson Kaufman - chemist who developed the concept of conformational topology
Vera Rubin - co-authored 114 peer reviewed papers. She specializes in the study of dark matter and galaxy rotation rates.
Mary Sherman Morgan - rocket scientist who invented hydyne, a liquid fuel that powered the USA’s Jupiter C-rocket.
Chien-Siung Wu - physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project, as well as experimental radioactive studies. She was the first woman to become president of the American Physical Society.
Mildred Catherine Rebstock - first person to synthesize the antibiotic chloromycetin.
Ruby Hirose - chemist who conducted vital research about an infant paralysis vaccine.
Hattie Elizabeth Alexander - pediatrician and microbiologist who developed a remedy for Haemophilus influenzae, and conducted vital research on antibiotic resistance.
Marie Tharp - mapped the floor of the Atlantic Ocean and provided proof of continental drift.
Mae Jamison - astronaut who holds a degree in chemical engineering from Stanford University and was the first black woman in space.
Ada Lovelace - mathematician and considered to be the world’s first computer programmer.
Patricia E Bath - ophthalmologist and the inventor of the Laserphaco Probe, which is used to treat cataracts.
Barbara McClintock - won a Nobel prize for her discovery that genes could move in and between chromosomes.
Cecilia Payne - discovered what the universe is made of, she also discovered what the sun is made of (Henry Norris Russell is usually given credit for discovering that the sun’s composition is different from the Earth’s, but he came to his conclusions four years later than Payne—after telling her not to publish).
Yanping Guo - mission design leader and one of the women who made up 25% of the New Horizons team. She configured the entire mission trajectory, including Jupiter and Pluto flybys.
Agnodice - went to study medicine in Alexandria to help keep women from dying in childbirth, pretended to be a man when she came back because it was illegal for a woman to be a doctor in Athens, was so much better than her male colleagues they brought her to court and accused her of seducing her patients as an explanation for her popularity but since she was the reason so many of the court had living wives and kids they were shamed into changing the law instead of executing her.
Queen Seondeok of Silla - set up first astronomy tower in Asia
Jocelyn Bell Bernell - discovered first pulsar, Anthony Hewish took credit listiner her as an assistant despite having nothing to do with the discovery, he received a Nobel Prize
Nettie Stevens - discovered that chromosomes determined sex, sent her findings to a colleague for peer review, he published it as his own and named her his technician
Marie Curie - won 2 Nobel prizes and was constantly attacked by her male colleagues and barred from academic organizations because she was a woman, still managed to be better than them
Marie Van Brittan Brown - black woman who co-invented home security surveillance
Vera Rubin - discovered dark matter at Cornell after being rejected from Princeton because she was a woman
I’m too tired to keep going but how about Jane Goodall, Sally Ride, Rosalind Franklin, Rachel Carson, Elizabeth Blackwell, Dorothy Hodgkin, Shirley Ann Jackson, Kalpana Chawla, Maryam Mirzakhani, Flossie Wong-Staal, Alice Ball, Ida Tacke, Ester Lederberg, Mileva Maric?
The absence of women in history is man made.
ACTUALLY, FOUR ASTRONAUTS AND A FIGHTER PILOT!
“From left to right; astronauts Stephanie Wilson, Joan Higginbotham, Mae Jemison, Yvonne Cagle and fighter pilot Shawna Kimbrell”
Source
Learn more about these great women:
1. Stephanie Wilson
2. Joan Higginbotham
3. Mae Jemison
4. Yvonne Cagle
5. Shawna Kimbrell
Reblogging for Black History Month 2017!
HELL TO THE FUCKING TO THE YES
YAY FOR THOSE WOMEN! POWERFUL BLACK WOMEN.
I will never be this cool and that is a million times percent okay with me
This was recorded by the Portsmouth Sinfonia in an experiment where all the members of the orchestra would swap instruments with each other and attempt to play them to the best of their ability.
favorite things about this
literally all the brass starts to get the hang of it and then the crescendos happen and everyone is like FUCK FUCK FUCK??? FUCK. JUST. BLOW RLY HARD.
the strings are lazy but also the same. like u can tell a lot of the ppl w/ the stringed instruments may already basically know how to play stringed instruments. like there’s definitely a section at the beginning where you hear a good portion going “oh yeah this is like. a smaller/bigger version of what i do.”
all you hear of any woodwinds is just “pffffttt??? pFFFTTTT???? PFFFFFTTTT I SAID PFFFFTTTT!!!!!” bc woodwinds are fucking HARD and you hear after like the first crescendo half of them just give up. they give up. they’re done. fuck this it tastes weird and my lips hurt.
that trumpet. that person is fucking TRYING man they fucking GOT this. they may not have figured out notes but they figured out LOUD and they GOT this.
I JUST DIED
I SEARCHED THIS POST FOR AGES OH MY GOD
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
Lotsa classics passing through today.
“pffffttt??? pFFFTTTT???? PFFFFFTTTT I SAID PFFFFTTTT!!!!!”
<3 <3 <3 (As a person who has played piano, clarinet, bassoon, percussion, and guitar, I love this so hard. Don’t care if I’ve already reblogged it. It’s happening again.)
Duelling women, circa 1900
Fred Astaire and George Murphy in ‘Broadway Melody of 1940’, 1940.
This is exactly what I am always saying...
Puppet shows from the bas-de-page illustrations of the Romance of Alexander (Bodl. 264), c. 1338-1344.
“What would happen if we stop posting anything until Tumblr decides to protect the creator´s rights by making it impossible to erase the credits.”
Monday, June 1, 2015, no content except the “Protect the Creators” photo.
You can find it in the Google Drive folder, linked in this post of qbnscholar.
What is this initiative about?
It is about giving all creators on Tumblr - whichever kind of art they create - the choice whether their original artwork (writing, painting, photography, you name it) they provide for free for others to reblog, can be changed by removing the captions and/or credits.
For many photographers captions and titles are a vital part of their posts. And they should be given the choice whether their posts can be changed on a reblog or not. On an app, the removal of captions is even simply a “one-tap” option. Captions and credits are part of the post.
Examples: An answered ask can be reblogged, but rebloggers cannot change the original post. They can add comments, thoughts, whatever, but they CANNOT change the original post.
As you probably have seen some on other blogs, Tumblr did already react with an email. We (as in “photosworthseeing”) also received said email, in which the director of support Elizabeth explicitly stated, that this is (quote)
“(…) an important issue to (…) [Tumblr].Tumblr does not approve of (and in fact prohibits) the unauthorized use of copyrighted materials on our service. It’s important to us to see that creators receive proper credit for their work on Tumblr, and we try to provide copyright holders with tools to protect against the unauthorized use of their content.” and even tries (quote) “to encourage those unique conversations while preserving all due credit to a post’s original creator.”
Protect the creators! ALL creators!
Writing with violets: when science meets lady-like accomplishments in 1800!
I tried a science experiment/party trick from a book of scientific and mathematical amusements dated 1801. Violets have a special property: like litmus paper, violet juice changes color when it contacts acidic or basic substances. Read my blog post to see how I used violet juice as a color-changing ink!
Pontcysyllte Aqueduct
The incredible feat of Victorian engineering that allows you to row and sail on a canal barge 125 feet above the ground. Find out more here
(Second image source - wrexham.com)
~ Etiquette; Or, A Guide To The Usages of Society, by Count Alfred D’Orsay, 1843
Dr. Mae Jemison, MD, the first black woman in space and first actual astronaut to appear on a Star Trek show, one of the very few people on this planet of whom two pictures can be posted depicting them doing their job on a spaceship with entirely different contexts.
Holy shit this is a serious contender for the best post I’ve ever seen on tumblr.
I didn't know she'd been on Star Trek...
Reading fairytales by Exempeel
Can Elizabeth Bennet Make it Mainstream?
Can Elizabeth Bennet Make it Mainstream? #comics
It is a strange question. For fans of Jane Austen they will argue that she already is and that she always have been. The main character and heroine of Pride and Prejudice is a beloved character by many from literature, especially for those that consider themselves fans of Jane Austen. She is adored because of her unusual circumstances, a member of the lesser nobility, but one that is in danger…
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Is this person living under a rock, or just narrow minded, unobservant, and lacking in imagination?
this is it. everything in my life has been preparing me for this moment.
This is a trick question. There is no Jane Bennett. There is a Jane Bennet.
I think this is the painting that Jane Austen saw at an exhibition after Pride and Prejudice was published and determined was a representation of Jane Bennet...