EPA
Exhibit Pays Tribute to Women Pioneers in Science and
Engineering
(PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 28, 2013) The
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s mid-Atlantic Regional Office unveiled at its center city office
today a new exhibit honoring the contributions of women scientists and
engineers. Located in EPA’s Public Information Center at 1650 Arch Street, the
exhibit features a photo gallery and biographies of famous women pioneers in
science and engineering, along with Victorian dresses and historic artifacts.
This current EPA exhibit is open to the public on week days through June 2013.
“This exhibit, by EPA Region III’s Women in
Science and Engineering or WISE committee, increases the awareness of
contributions by women who have positively shaped our society and the
environment through their pioneering work in what were non-traditional careers,”
said EPA mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator Shawn M. Garvin. “Our hope is that
visitors, especially students, will be better informed and inspired to pursue
careers in science and engineering."
EPA’s exhibit pays tribute to an ethnically
and socially diverse group of 29 historical and modern-day women who have made
significant achievements in a variety of scientific fields. Among those featured
are Rachel Carson, whose 1962 book Silent Spring is credited as being the
catalyst for the modern environmental movement, Ellen Swallow Richards, who in
1892 taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is so-called the
‘mother of the science of ecology,’ and Olga D. Gonzalez-Sanabria, Director of
Engineering at NASA.
EPA’s WISE program works to increase women's
representation and success in science and engineering fields.
For more information about visiting EPA’s
Public Information Center http://www.epa.gov/region03/ee/pic.htm.
To hear an EPA podcast about the exhibit http://www.epa.gov/region03/multimedia/index.html.
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