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         Hodgkin Dorothy Crowfoot:     more detail
  1. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by J. William Moncrief, 2001
  2. Biochimiste: Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, Robert Crane, Fernand Seguin, George Wald, Ernst Boris Chain, Juan Negrín, Paul Nurse, Eduard Buchner (French Edition)
  3. Birkbeck, Science and History, (Occasional Publications: New Series - Department of Geograph) by Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, 1970-01
  4. Structure of vitamin B‚‚‚, by Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, 1955
  5. Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin, O.M: A biographical memoir by Guy Dodson, 2002
  6. Structural Studies on Molecules of Biological Interest: A Volume in Honour of Dorthy Hodgkin

81. Books Mentioned
The Collected Works of dorothy crowfoot hodgkin. dorothy hodgkin, who won the NobelPrize in 1964 belongs to a small group of scientists who changed the face of
http://bca.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/bca/CNews/books/Sep96.html
Books mentioned in issue 58 September 96
Dorothy Hodgkin and Linus Pauling - A tribute
A report on the talks given at the Montreal Meeting of the American Crystallographic Association on 25 July 1995, collected into a 32 page booklet with 4 pages of photographs and diagrams. Available for $8 (plus postage and packing) from the Polycrystal Book Service, PO Box 3439, Dayton, Ohio 45401 USA email polybook@dnaco.net or try thei web page at http://www.dnaco.net/~polybook
The Collected Works of DOROTHY CROWFOOT HODGKIN
Dorothy Hodgkin, who won the Nobel Prize in 1964 belongs to a small group of scientists who changed the face of science - as will be abundantly clear from the papers in this collection. She is acknowledged as the leading crystallographer in the field of natural products; she had an unerring instinct for sensing the most significant structural problems in this field. The landmarks of her work are cholesterol, penicillin, vitamin B12 and insulin. Through her numerous collaborators she has played a major part in the spread of X-ray crystallography all over the world. She was a visiting Raman Professor of the Indian Academy of Sciences. To commemorate this, the Academy has published her collected works in three volumes, printed by Interline Publishing, Bangalore. ISBN 81-7296-020-4 The first volume contains all the papers Dorothy and her collaborators have published on insulin from the first report of the X-ray photographs she took in 1935 to the solving of its structure in 1969 and its final refinement. It has vii + 635 pages.

82. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
dorothy crowfoot hodgkin was born in Cairo, Egypt She was the winner of the NobelPrize of Chemistry in 1964 for recognizing the intricate shape of the vitamin
http://library.advanced.org/20117/hodgkin.html
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Women in Science
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Click image for the Site Languages : Site Desciption Students can use this informative web site to study the many womenpast and presentwho are involved in science. Read their biographies and online interviews.Take an electronic field trip to an observatory, a cytogenetic lab, or an earthquake center. Maybe someday someone you know will be listed here. Could it be you?
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83. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkins
dorothy crowfoot hodgkin, a British biochemist and crystallographer, won the 1964Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her determination by xray techniques of the
http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/Museum/hodgki.html
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin a British biochemist and crystallographer, won the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for "her determination by x-ray techniques of the structures of biologically important molecules." In other words she used x-rays to find the structural layouts of atoms and the overall molecular shape of over 100 molecules including: penicillin, vitamin B-12, vitamin D, and insulin. Hodgkin's improvements using x-ray crystallography elevated the technique to an important analytical tool. (Crystallography is a combination of physics, math, and chemistry.) Dorothy was born on May 10, 1910 in Cairo, Egypt. She obtained degrees from Oxford and Cambridge Universities. By 1934, Hodgkin correctly analyzed the molecules for cholesterol iodide. Several years later she confirmed the structure of vitamin B-12, with the help of one of the first electronic computers. Understanding the molecular structure of vitamin B-12 has helped scientists to understand how the human body uses B-12 to build red blood cells and prevent some types of anemia. Dorothy's discovery of the molecular layout of penicillin helped lead scientists to develop other antibiotics. As her discovery happened during World War II, this information aided scientists in helping to develop the antibiotics necessary to treat war injuries.

84. Women In Science: Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin--Scientist
dorothy crowfoot hodgkin (19101994) was the second woman to win an unshared NobelPrize for chemistry (in 1964; Marie Curie had been the first in 1911).
http://www.inventions.org/culture/science/women/hodgkin.html
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Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
Scientist
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910-1994) was the second woman to win an unshared Nobel Prize for chemistry (in 1964; Marie Curie had been the first in 1911). Hodgkin was not only a world-renowned theorist and mathematician but also an important pioneer in using the tools of experimental physics to elucidate the foundations of biochemical structure. Born in Cairo, Egypt, and schooled in England, Hodgkin had a childhood interest in science that would find its full expression in the realm of crystals and the technique of X-ray crystallography, wherein patterns of diffraction made by passing X-rays through crystals yielded dramatic new information about their molecular structures. With unmatched interpretive skills, Hodgkin determined the structures of penicillin, vitamin B12 and insulin, which had immediate and profound effects on disease control as well as the study of other complex substances such as DNA. Be sure to read about how other female,

85. FECS Millennium Project - Hodgkin
hodgkin, dorothy (born crowfoot) Born Cairo hodgkin's work was unique not just forits technical brilliance or its medical importance, but because, at
http://www.chemsoc.org/networks/enc/fecs/Hodgkin.htm
FECS Millennium Project
100 Distinguished European Chemists
20th Century
Hodgkin, Dorothy (born Crowfoot)
Born: Cairo (Egypt), 1910
Died: Warwickshire (England), 1994
Hodgkin studied at the Somerville College, Oxford. She was fascinated by the complex organic structures. As Bernal's assistant she became a crystallographer and obtained her Ph.D. in Cambridge (1937). She worked on the determination of different important compounds: pepsin, sterols, insulin, penicillin and vitamin B12. Hodgkin's work was unique not just for its technical brilliance or its medical importance, but because, at every step she used computing machines of various degrees of sophistication. It was for the work on penicillin and vitamin B12 that she won the Nobel Prize in 1964. Links http://crystsun1.unige.ch/iucr-top/people/crowfoot.htm
http://www.chemheritage.org/HistoricalServices/pharmachievers.html#hodgkin

http://curie.che.virginia.edu/scientist/hodgkin.html

http://nobelprizes.com/nobel/chemistry/1964a.html
...
www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1964/index.html
For further information on this chemist search the RSC's historical chemistry information service provided by the Library and Information Centre Go to 20th Century Chemists About ENC FECS ...
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86. Diversity
This page, part of a website about women in sciernce, offers a short biography ofDorothy crowfoot hodgkin, the winner of the nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1964.
http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/diversity.htm
Diversity in Biology
Infusing Diversity in the Curriculum Project
by Michael J. Farabee, Ph.D., Estrella Mountain Community College So much of the biology studied in introductory classes deals with the accomplishments of a small group of people: white males. There are several reasons for this, including the exclusion of women from academe for many years. This has changed. Please visit the links below and answer a short series of questions pertaining to the significance of achievements by the following people:
Mary Anning
Mary Anning (1799-1847) During her lifetime Mary Anning, an untrained Englishwoman who supported her family by fossil collecting, made a number of significant discoveries, including the first ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. Despite her beimng hailed as "the greatest fossilist ever", her life has been made the subject of several books and articles, yet little of her life is really known. This website at the Museum of Paleontology and the University of California at Berkeley offers a short biography and listing of her contributions to the early days of paleontology. (URL: http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/anning.html

87. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin: Awards Won By Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
Awards of dorothy crowfoot hodgkin.
http://www.123awards.com/artist/4892.asp
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88. Chemistry 1964
b. 1910 d. 1994. The nobel Prize in Chemistry 1964 Presentation Speech dorothy CrowfootHodgkin Biography nobel Lecture Banquet Speech Other Resources. 1963, 1965.
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1964/
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1964
"for her determinations by X-ray techniques of the structures of important biochemical substances" Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin United Kingdom Royal Society, Oxford University
Oxford, United Kingdom b. 1910
d. 1994 The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1964
Presentation Speech
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
Biography
...
Other Resources
The 1964 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
...
Peace
Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

89. Reference Information Journal Name Journal Of Chemical Education
Acronym, 1982 JCE, Call Number, SEL/CHEM QD1 J82. Article Name, DorothyCrowfoot hodgkin nobel Laureate . Volume Number, 59, Issue Number,2.
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/refdb/1982_JCE-840082165.html
Reference Information Journal Name Journal of Chemical Education Acronym 1982 JCE Call Number SEL/CHEM QD1 J82 Article Name "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin: Nobel Laureate" Volume Number Issue Number Date February 1982 Pages Author Maureen M. Julian Other Authors Additional Information Women Cited Crystallography
Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot
Reference to publications
in scientific journals yes Biographical references yes Areas of Research yes Discoveries Made yes Notes This article discusses the life and work of Dorothy Hodgkin.

90. JCE 2003 (80) 266 [Mar] Nobel Women In Science: Their Lives, Struggles, And Mome
Curie, Barbara McClintock, Maria Goeppert Mayer, Rita LeviMontalcini, dorothy CrowfootHodgkin, Gertrude Elion, and Rosalyn Yalow all are nobel winners, while
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/Journal/Issues/2003/Mar/abs266.html
Nobel Women in Science: Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries, 2nd Edition (Sharon Bertsch McGrayne)
Joseph Henry Press: Washington, DC, 2001. 450 pp, photographs, figures, notes, index, ISBN 0-309-07270-0 (paperback). $19.95 Reviewed by Cheryl Baldwin Frech
Department of Chemistry, University of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK 73034-5209 Nobel Women in Science
Citation : Frech, Cheryl Baldwin. J. Chem. Educ. Keywords : Women in Chemistry; Textbooks; Public Understanding
March 2003
Vol. 80 No. 3
p. 266

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91. Oxford Brookes University: Medical Video Archive: Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hod
In the first of a series of four interviews, nobel laureate Professor dorothy CrowfootHodgkin OM FRS (191093) talks of a Suffolk ancestry, early education
http://www.brookes.ac.uk/schools/bms/medical/synopses/hodgkin1.html
Professor Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS (1910-1994)
in interview with Max Blythe
Oxford, 6 November 1987
Interview I MSVA 025 MSVA 037 MSVA 041 MSVA 047 Main subjects discussed: the Crowfoot and Hodgkin families, parental contributions to the life of the Sudan, Somerville College Oxford, Margery Fry, early x-ray crystallography, J D Bernal. Transcript available Back to main Hodgkin record Back to Interviewees

92. Nat'l Academies Press, Nobel Prize Women In Science: (2001), Table Of Contents
nobel Prize Women in Science Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries,Second Edition (2001) Joseph Henry
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309072700/html/
Nobel Prize Women in Science: Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries, Second Edition
Joseph Henry Press ( JHP
Related Books

Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii 1 A Passion for Discovery, pp. 1-8 2 Marie Sklodowska Curie, pp. 9-36 3 Lise Meitner, pp. 37-63 4 Emmy Noether, pp. 64-90 5 Gerty Radnitz Cori, pp. 91-116 7 Barbara McClintock, pp. 144-174 8 Maria Goeppert Mayer, pp. 175-200 9 Rita Levi-Montalcini, pp. 201-224 10 Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, pp. 225-253 11 Chien-Shiung Wu, pp. 254-278 12 Gertrude Belle Elion, pp. 279-302 13 Rosalind Elsie Franklin, pp. 303-331 14 Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, pp. 332-354 15 Jocelyn Bell Burnell, pp. 355-377 Afterword, pp. 406-407 Notes, pp. 408-429 Picture Acknowledgments, pp. 430-432 Index, pp. 433-459 About the Author, pp. 460-460
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