Date | Text | |
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29 Jul 1994
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin |
death Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Died 29 Jul 1994 at age 84 (born 12 May 1910). Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin (née Crowfoot) was an English biochemist and X-ray crystallographer, born in Cairo, Egypt to English parents, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1964 for her discoveries, by the use of X-ray techniques, of the structure of biologically important molecules, including penicillin (1946), vitamin B-12 (1956), and later, the protein hormone insulin (1969). Her achievements included not only these structure determinations and the scientific insight they provided but also the development of methods that made such structure determinations possible. (One of her students was Margaret Roberts, later Margaret Thatcher, the only British prime minister with a degree in science.) |
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29 Jul 1994
Dorothy Hodgkin |
death Dorothy Hodgkin Dorothy Hodgkin (b. 1910), British biochemist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. |