THREAD: Happy International #WomenInScience day! Take a look at some influential women who have had a positive impact on the field.π
Janne Nolan made us all part of something. Part of her girl gang. Part of her consensus. Part of her plan to break open the nuclear priesthood and speak truth to power. #WomenInScienceow.ly/ferN50HSZLn
Kateryna Pavlova battled a pandemic, wildfires, corruption, and sexism in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone #WomenInScienceow.ly/qRLF50HSZVJ
Katharine Hayhoe, one of the founding mothers of #Science Moms, explained why moms are key players in the fight against climate change. #WomenInScienceow.ly/T37q50HT1gu
Learn about Susan Solomon, the woman who solved the mystery of the Antarctic ozone hole and has won one of the worldβs biggest science prizes. #WomenInScienceow.ly/wYnz50HT5v9
In the arms control field, gender dynamics contribute to the sidelining of frontline communities, sustaining the systems of oppression and marginalization that caused them harm in the first place.
How do humans make sense of the bomb? β a thread of every picture in this photo essay by Robert Del Tredici. ow.ly/zxKL50GnJTh
This glass sphere, 3.2 inches across, is the exact size of the plutonium ball in the Nagasaki bomb.
Photo by Robert Del Tredici. ow.ly/REns50GnLtn
A model of the uranium atom at the American Museum of Science and Energy, Los Alamos, New Mexico on June 11, 1982.
Photo by Robert Del Tredici. ow.ly/REns50GnLtn