-
Opposition candidate concedes defeat in Benin presidential election
-
SCANDIC COIN, a digital currency within a closed ecosystem
-
'Beautiful' battle with Sinner extra motivation: Alcaraz
-
Szoboszlai says sorry to Liverpool fans after Man City incident
-
Goldman Sachs eyes more corporate mergers despite war uncertainty
-
Star names inspiring Barca teen Yamal for Atletico comeback
-
LVMH sales feel impact from war
-
Satisfaction as Rolling Stones drop track under Cockroaches name
-
Serie A clubs endorse Milan-Cortina chief Malago as football federation president
-
Liverpool need 'very special' night to stun PSG, says Slot
-
Russian, Belarusian swimmers free to compete under own flag
-
Trump vows US will sink any Iran boats that challenge blockade
-
Right-wing candidates tipped for runoff in Peru presidential poll
-
Norwegian effectively cured of HIV after transplant from brother
-
French court gives teacher suspended sentence over pupil's suicide
-
'No warning': Survivors say Nigerian air force bombed packed market
-
Pope says doesn't fear Trump, has 'moral duty to speak out' against war
-
'No fun': French hospital confronts laughing gas abuse
-
Pro-EU Magyar vows 'new era' in Hungary after ousting Orban in vote
-
UK Taylor Swift dance party stabbing spree 'avoidable': inquiry
-
Iran releases assets of football captain in Australia asylum row
-
French court jails Lafarge ex-CEO for funding IS in Syria
-
Atletico need 'personality' to prevent Barca comeback: Koke
-
Cameroon's Catholics divided on papal visit
-
South Africa's new DA leader vows to shed party's white image
-
Karol G honors Latinos in Coachella headline performance: 'Feel proud'
-
Oil surges, stocks drop as Trump threatens to block Hormuz
-
Pope's African tour begins in shadow of Trump ire
-
'Help me!': family's anguish over Equatorial Guinean lured into Ukraine war
-
Germany unveils 1.6 bn euro fuel price relief to tackle energy shock
-
Iran executed at least 1,639 in 2025, more hangings feared: NGOs
-
Ukraine loan, frozen funds: how could Orban's ouster unblock EU?
-
What next for Pogacar, Van der Poel after Roubaix blow?
-
Orban loses Hungary vote to pro-Europe newcomer Magyar
-
US says to begin blockade of Iranian ports
-
Germany to cut fuel taxes amid Iran war energy shock
-
Pope Leo kicks off African tour under shadow of Trump's ire
-
Singer Luisa Sonza shares 'unique experience' of Coachella debut
-
US military to begin blockade of Iranian ports on Monday
-
Australia names Coyle first woman to lead army
-
Rashford with point to prove as Barca target Atletico comeback
-
Iran executed at least 1,639 people in 2025, most since 1989: NGOs
-
Nuggets roll into NBA playoffs, Raptors clinch berth
-
Flagg's sensational rookie season ends with injury
-
Trump says 'not a big fan' of Pope Leo after his anti-war message
-
Spain's Sanchez calls China trade imbalance with EU 'unsustainable'
-
Oil surges, stocks fall as Trump says to blockade Strait of Hormuz
-
Rivers departing as Bucks coach after disappointing season
-
Raptors top Nets, grab No. 5 seed on last day of NBA regular season
-
Greece's ancient sites get climate-change checkup
The women scientists forgotten by history
French doctor and researcher Marthe Gautier, who died over the weekend, was one of a long line of women scientists who greatly contributed to scientific discovery only to see the credit go to their male colleagues.
Here are just a few of the women scientists whose work was forgotten by history.
- Marthe Gautier -
Gautier, who died at the age of 96 on Saturday, discovered that people with Down's syndrome had an extra chromosome in 1958.
But when she was unable to identify the exact chromosome with her lower-power microscope, she "naively" lent her slides to geneticist Jerome Lejeune, she told the Science journal in 2014.
She was then "shocked" to see the discovery of the extra chromosome 21 published in research six month later, with Lejeune's name first and hers second -- and her name misspelled.
It was not until 1994 that the ethics committee of France's INSERM medical research institute said Lejeune was unlikely to have played the "dominant" role in the discovery.
- Rosalind Franklin -
British chemist Rosalind Franklin's experimental work led to her famous 1952 X-ray image "Photo 51", which helped unlock the discovery of the DNA double helix.
But Francis Crick and James Watson were working on a similar theory at the time, and their research was published ahead of Franklin's in the same journal, leading many to think her study merely supported theirs.
Crick and Watson won the Nobel Prize for Medicine for the discovery in 1962 -- Franklin had died four years earlier at the age of just 37.
In a letter from 1961 that emerged in 2013, Crick acknowledged the importance of her work in determining "certain features" of the molecule.
- Jocelyn Bell Burnell -
British astrophysicist Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovered the first radio pulsars when she was a postgraduate student in 1967.
But it was her thesis supervisor and another male astronomer who won 1974's Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery.
- Lise Meitner -
Austrian-Swedish physicist Lise Meitner was one of the key people responsible for discovering nuclear fission, leading to Albert Einstein dubbing her the "German Marie Curie".
However it was her long-term collaborator Otto Hahn who won the 1944 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery.
- Chien-Shiung Wu -
Chinese-American physicist Chien-Shiung Wu worked on the Manhattan Project and conducted the "Wu experiment", which overturned what had been previously considered a fundamental law of nature -- the conservation of parity.
But again it was her male colleagues who won the 1975 Nobel Physics prize for the research.
Her work earned her the nickname "Chinese Madame Curie".
- And so on -
The list could go -- and the women scientists named above are merely those whose contributions have been belatedly recognised decades later.
The contributions of male scientists' wives, mothers and daughters are also believed to have long been overlooked, including that of Einstein's first wife, mathematician and physicist Mileva Maric.
In 1993 American historian Margaret Rossiter dubbed the systematic suppression of women's contributions to scientific progress the "Matilda effect", after US rights activist Matilda Joslyn Gage.
Even today the role played by women in scientific history is under-represented in school textbooks, French historian Natalie Pigeard-Micault told AFP.
"It gives the impression that scientific research is limited to a handful of women," she said, pointing to how Marie Curie was always an "exceptional" reference point.
T.Ibrahim--SF-PST