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5 Things anda Should Know About Pioneering Geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi

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Fanpup says...
I remember visiting this website once...
It was called google Doodle Is Celebrating Katsuko Saruhashi. Here's Why | Time
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
5 Things You Should Know About Pioneering Geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi
On March 22, 2018 Google\'s doodle honors pioneering geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi on what would have been her 98th birthday.
Thursday’s Google Doodle celebrates pioneering geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi on what would have been her 98th birthday.
Saruhashi’s groundbreaking research focused on acid rain, radioactivity spread through oceans, and CO2 levels in seawater.
She was the first woman to earn a PhD in chemistry from the University of Tokyo in 1957, the first woman elected to the Science Council of Japan in 1980, and the first woman to win the Miyake Prize for geochemistry in 1985, an award named after her mentor, Miyake Yasuo.
2. To promote more women in the science, Saruhashi also started the Society of Japanese Women Scientists
The mission of the society, established in 1958, is to have more women contributing to sciences and world peace.
“There are many women who have the ability to become great scientists. I would like to see the day when women can contribute to science and technology on an equal footing with men,” she once said.
Geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi speaks during an interview on August 23, 1999 in Japan.
3. Saruhashi’s first major contribution to the field involved a methodology to determine CO2 levels in seawater
She was the first to determine carbonic acid levels based on temperature, pH Level, and chlorinity. Today, oceanographers call this “Saruhashi’s Table”.
4. Saruhashi’s second major area of research was to quantify nuclear pollution caused by testing in the 1950s
She measured the amount of radioactivity in seawater and found that fallout from U.S. atomic tests in the Marshall Islands in the 1950s reached Japan after about a year and a half. Her findings on how radioactivity spreads helped led to restrictions on oceanic nuclear experimentation in 1963.
The Saruhashi Prize is an annual award to recognize the research contributions of female scientists.
Google’s Doodle remembers Saruhashi with an illustration that depicts her with a clipboard in front of a turbulent blue sea.
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