Not added to the blogroll, but a neat blog nonetheless, is Endless Forms Most Beautiful, the blog for Elissa Hoffman's AP Biology class at Appleton East High School in Appleton, WI. She and her students will be blogging about biology, but she is also looking for guest bloggers who "have an area of expertise, research- or career-wise, that pertains to biology" and are willing to discuss the post (in the comments) with the students.
Data Not Shown is a new science blog by UK postdoc Karen James (aka nunatak). James is also one half of the bloggers at The HMS Beagle Project, with the following mission:
We aim to celebrate Charles Darwin's 200th birthday by building a sailing replica of HMS Beagle and recreating the Voyage of the Beagle with an international crew of researchers, aspiring scientists and science communicators. The voyage will apply the techniques of 21st century science to Darwin's journey, inspiring a new generation of scientists and promoting the public understanding of evolution and wider science.Rebecca Hunt works at "Augustana College as a Paleontology Research Assistant and fossil preprator" and blogs at Dinochick Blog.
All in the Mind "life and beyond through the mind's eye", an ABC (that's Australian Broadcasting Company) Radio National Blog by science/health journalist Natasha Mitchell
Make No Bones is the blog of paleontology graduate student Sally Pine.
Bio/Rocks is the blog of Sarah, a graduate student in vertebrate paleontology at UC Berkeley.
Amanda, another student paleontologist blogs at Self-Designed Student
a geocentric view by "mollishka" a graduate student in astronomy (even if she isn't interested in the whole "women in science" discussion)
Theorema Egregium is Brazilian physicist post grad Christine Dantas' "place for personal studies on Physics, Mathematics and Philosophy"
I’m an astrophysicist turned into a software engineer turned into a condensed matter physicist. What I really would like to be: a mathematician, a philosopher, and a writer. But above everything, I am a mother.Quantum Diaries followed "physicists from around the world as they live the World Year of Physics" - which was 2005. No, they haven't been updated since then, but they do provide a glimpse into the work of some international physicists.
- Sophie Trincaz-Duvoid (IN2P3, in French)
- Maaike Limper (NIKHEF, in Dutch and English)
- Debbie Harris (Fermilab, in English)
- Caolionn O'Connell (SLAC, in English)
- Ursula Bassler (IN2P3, in English)
- Sandra Leone (INFN, in Italian)
- Rosa Alba (INFN, in Italian)
- Claire Gray (Wits University, Jefferson Lab, in English)
- Sarah Phillips (Jefferson Lab, in English)
Astronomer and Southern Illinois University Edwardsville faculty member Dr. Pamela L. Gay blogs at Star Stryder.
Amanda blogs at A Chemist's Laboratory Notebook
Jes Sherman, aka Ψ*Ψ , blogs at Carbon-Based Curiosities. From her profile:
Ψ*Ψ is the one who inevitably does most of the device posts, not entirely by choice. She’s currently a synthetiker in one lab and an analytical chemist in anotherT LouScientist blogs at A scientist's life. The description:and also a ninja. Most of her time is spent making colorful aromatic things, cursing at heterocycles and trying to graduate with her sanity (mostly) intact.
Diary of an ex-postdoctoral scientist, who used to work tirelessly in a lab somewhere. (I might be back in a lab sometime soon though)Zero Divides is written by "a 24 year old female undergraduate student pursuing a degree in Mathematics"
Unbalanced Reaction is the "Experiences of a female science graduate student (soon-to-be Ph.D.) struggling to reach equilibrium"
ScienceMama is molecular biologist/geneticist trying to balance being a postdoc and a mom. She blogs at Mother of All Scientists.
Cherish Maunders is an electrical engineering graduate student who blogs at the excellently-named Faraday's Cage is where you put Schroedinger's Cat
Dr. Medusa is a science faculty member at a US research university who blogs about diversity in science, math, and engineering.
Young Stellar Objects is the blog of Hannah, an astronomer.Finally, geologist and pie-lover Green Gabro now blogs at Science Blogs under her own name, Maria Brumm.
Tags: women in scienceblogs
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