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A podcast about women's work in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics.

Babes of Science Poncie Rutsch

    • Vetenskap

A podcast about women's work in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics.

    Susan La Flesche Picotte

    Susan La Flesche Picotte

    Susan La Flesche was the first Native American to earn a medical degree. She proceeded to become the physician for the Omaha Nation, traveling by horse and buggy to care for a community spread across an area the size of Rhode Island.
    Babes of Science is a podcast that seeks to answer two questions: Who are the women who changed the trajectory of science? And why has it taken us so long to recognize their work?
    Image courtesy of the Nebraska State Historical Society Photograph Collections.
    Music in this episode:
    Chance, Luck, Errors in Nature, Fate, Destruction As a Finale by Chris Zabriskie
    Violins And Tea (Instrumental) by Loch Lomond
    Young, Tough And Terrible by The Losers
    Third in Line by Blue Dot Sessions
    Slow Strutt by Blue Dot Sessions
    Keep The Prices Down by Podington Bear
    Ice Cream Sandwich by Podington Bear
    Periodicals by Blue Dot Sessions
    Cedarleaf by Rho

    • 13 min
    Lady Ranelagh

    Lady Ranelagh

    Every early chemist has heard of Boyle’s law -- the equation that relates a gas’s pressure to its volume. But even if you have some awareness of Robert Boyle himself, it’s unlikely that you’ve heard of his sister...even though she was probably talking him through his ideas, either in person or by letter.
    This episode of Babes of Science was produced in collaboration with Distillations Podcast. 
    Babes of Science is a podcast that seeks to answer two questions: Who are the women who changed the trajectory of science? And why has it taken us so long to recognize their work?

    Music in this episode:
    Theme: Showers by Podington Bear
    Day Into Night by Rho
    Daydream Shelshock by Wolf Asylum
    Am I The Devil YEYEY
    History Explains Itself by The Losers
    Like Swimming Broke For Free
    Insatiable Toad by Blue Dot Sessions
    One And by Broke For Free
    Modulation of the Spirit
    Melt by Broke For Free
    Eleanor by The Losers
    I Am A Man Who Will Fight For Your Honor by Chris Zabriskie
    Tidal Wave by YEYEY

    • 20 min
    Marguerite Perey

    Marguerite Perey

    Marguerite Perey identified a new element called Francium while she was working in the Curie laboratory. So why don't we know her name?
    MUSIC:
    Mile Post 1 by Alex Fitch
    Drifting Spade by Blue Dot Sessions
    Building The Sun by Broke For Free
    Biolumina L2 by Little Glass Men
    History Explains Itself by The Losers
    Summer Spliffs by Broke For Free

    • 6 min
    Henrietta Lacks

    Henrietta Lacks

    Henrietta Lacks developed an aggressive form of cervical cancer, and died at the age of 31. The cells from the tumor on her cervix, however, are still alive today. More than twenty tons of her cells have grown in labs, participating in disease research for the polio vaccine and for AIDS treatment. And Henrietta's cells have literally traveled to space and back.
    MUSIC:
    Secret Place by Alex Fitch
    Kelp Grooves by Little Glass Men
    Love is Not by Broke For Free
    Tiptoe (Instrumental) by YEYEY
    Is That You Or Are You You? Chris Zabriskie
    Deadpanned by Jahzzar
    With Many Tears by Candlegravity
    Stakes and Things by Blue Dot Sessions
    Melt by Broke for Free

    • 13 min
    Bertha Pappenheim/Anna O.

    Bertha Pappenheim/Anna O.

    Bertha Pappenheim was spending each night by her sick father's bed when she began hallucinating. Josef Breuer would diagnose her with hysteria and spend two years practicing "the talking cure." He and Sigmund Freud later published her account as a case study under the name Anna O.
    To support the show, head to patreon.com/babesofscience. Or visit babesofscience.com for more information on Babes of Science. You can also follow @babescience on twitter for fun facts about women in science history.
    Music in this episode:
    Dream Blaze by Little Glass Men
    Delta by Podington Bear
    Slow Slow Sky by Blue Dot Sessions
    From Here to Iceland (Full) by Loch Lomond
    A Suicide by Candlegravity
    You Bastard! by The Losers
    Daydreamer by Podington Bear
    Jupiter The Blue by Gillicuddy
    The Temperature on the Bow of the Kaleetan by Chis Zabriskie
    How it Fades by Scott Gratton
    Be Mine and Be Kind (Instrumental) by Loch Lomond
     
     
     

    • 15 min
    Irène Joliot-Curie

    Irène Joliot-Curie

    Irène Joliot-Curie found that radioactivity wasn't just something to be found in the earth's elements -- scientists could make other metals radioactive. And then her research took her right up to nuclear fission...and World War II.
    To support the show, head to patreon.com/babesofscience. Or visit babesofscience.com for more information on Babes of Science. You can also follow @babescience on twitter for fun facts about women in science history.
    Music in this episode:
    Thematic by Blue Dot Sessions
    Divider by Chris Zabriskie
    John Stockton Slow Drag by Chris Zabriskie
    Frog Legs Rag by James Scott from 1906 piano roll
    Keep The Prices Down by Podington Bear
    Morning Mist by Podington Bear
    The Zeppelin by Blue Dot Sessions
    Beachhead by Podington Bear
    Grand Fell by Blue Dot Sessions
    Because You Hold Me Tight by Alex Fitch

    • 17 min

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