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Ladies in the Laboratory II
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Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Figures Chapter 2 Introduction Chapter 3 1. Scandinavia: Baltic Diatoms, Snow-line Plants, Insects of the Oatfields Chapter 4 2. Ireland: Mosses, Mollusks, and Migrating Boulders Chapter 5 3. France: Of Physics, Farms, and Physicians Chapter 6 4. Belgium and the Netherlands: from Ardennes Mosses to East Indies Algae Chapter 7 5. Germany: Bavarian Lakes, Brazilian Forests, a Kitchen in Braunschweig Chapter 8 6. Austria-Hungary: Mainly Medicine Chapter 9 7. Switzerland: Physicians, Botanists, and a Chemist Chapter 10 8. Italy: Shells of Calabria, Mosses of the Hills of Rome, Fishes of the Alpine Lakes Chapter 11 International Comparisons and Conclusions Chapter 12 Appendix Chapter 13 Bibliography of Papers by West European Women (excluding the British) in Scientific Periodicals, 1800-1900 Chapter 14 Periodical Title Abbreviations Key Chapter 15 Selected Bibliography Chapter 16 Index Chapter 17 About the Author

About the Author

Mary R.S. Creese is a former research chemist and has numerous publications in the field of the history of women scientists. Thomas M. Creese has taught mathematics at the University of Kansas since 1964.

Reviews

This is a highly scholarly endeavor filling a niche in both women's studies and the history of science; together with its companion book, this will be a classic resource for years to come in both disciplines. This volume is highly recommended for all academic libraries.
*American Reference Books Annual*

Ladies in the Laboratory II is both a valuable compendium of work done by women scientists in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and a fascinating recounting of their personal journeys as women and scientists....By telling their 'stories' Creese brings these early scientists to life and makes them accessible to the reader. One gets a fascinating journey into the lives of exceptional women who overcame serious social and political constraints to lead productive lives as scientists and women....it is a pleasure to read of early work in these fields...Ladies in the Laboratory II includes bibliographic references and the work is well documented. The book is useful for the scholar wishing to study activities in a particular field or country. For the more casual reader, the profiles are the most fascinating part of the work and one can return again and again to read of interesting science and to study intriguing lives. Marie Creese succeeds splendidly in casting a light on the lives of an important group of early women scientists.
*Bulletin for the History of Chemistry*

Essential. General readers; lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
*CHOICE*

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