1. Historical Context
1.1. Histories of women in science
Surveys of famous women have been assembled since at least the 14th century (Reference SchiebingerSchiebinger, 1987). Christine de Pizan wrote about women’s innovations in the sciences in her allegory, The book of the city of ladies (Reference De Pizande Pizan, 2004 [1405]), but the first encyclopedia of women in a scientific discipline, Jerome de Lalande’s Astronomie des dames, did not appear until 1786, a time when European intellectuals had become interested in social justice and equity. In his 1830 history of women in the medical disciplines, Christian Friedrich Harless theorized that men were drawn to science in order to discover the laws of nature while women were searching for expressions of love in the natural world. His was the last treatise to include Roman goddesses as important personalities in the history of women.
By the late 19th century, proponents of women’s participation in science had shifted from compiling lists of female scientists and their accomplishments to analyzing the circumstances limiting their access to the academy. In the first detailed book on this subject, Father John A. Zahm, C.S.C. argued pseudonymously (Reference MozansMozans, 1913) that contrary to popular thought at the time, women were not limited by biology but by access to education and opportunity. The first historians to write about women in science produced biographies in the ‘great man’ tradition, leaving issues unique to women in the sciences unexplored (Reference SchiebingerSchiebinger, 1987). In such treatments, events like Kathleen Lonsdale’s 1945 election to the Royal Society of London or Liz Morris’s 1987 arrival in Antarctica as a British Antarctic Survey (BAS) team member are hailed as transformative, yet as a group, women remain under-represented nearly two centuries after they gained access to higher education (Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001; European Commission, 2009a; Reference Canizares and ShaywitzCanizares and Shaywitz, 2010). This framework is also problematic because it assumes acceptance by ranking males as an appropriate metric by which to evaluate female accomplishments, obscuring the negotiated nature of women’s participation and progress. More careful examination of the history of women in science reveals persistent themes across time and national borders: women’s participation both waxes and wanes due to identifiable economic and social forcings. It is in this context that the stories of individual female glaciologists and women’s persistent under-representation in the physical sciences, including glaciology, must be understood.
1.2. The longue durée
Education, whether formal or informal, is the foundation for scientific achievement. Names of female scholars have been passed down since antiquity, but the record is spare (Reference MeschelMeschel, 1992;Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1993;Reference Sharma and SinghSharma, 2000). While cultural biases may affect whose names and accomplishments persist in the historical record, girls’ and women’s access to education has long trailed behind boys’ and men’s access. When women’s education is valued, it is often for benefits external to the individuals themselves (e.g. public health), and everywhere women’s access to education floats on a socio-political tide (Reference RossiterRossiter, 1998;Reference Fuchs, von Stebut and AllmendingerFuchs and others, 2001). Both progress and regress in women’s education can be found along a timeline that spans millennia and national borders, and varies with economic status and ethnic identity.
Women have long sought access to education and have long created alternatives where they found access denied. Women in medieval Europe were able to engage in scholarly studies within convents. The creation of cathedral schools and transition to formal universities in the High Middle Ages reduced scholarly opportunities because these new institutions were by design closed to women (Reference ShaharShahar, 2003, p. 5051). Only in exceptional cases, primarily in Italy and Germany, did women of the Middle Ages study at university (Reference SchiebingerSchiebinger, 1987;Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1993, p. 6-9). Craft guilds offered an alternative source of training as did, for the upper classes, the courts and salons of the Renaissance (Reference Campbell, Robin, Larsen and LevinCampbell, 2007). Indeed, the Renaissance was a rebirth for female intellectuals just as it was for men, although women’s subordinate social status persisted and access to education varied widely across national borders (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1993, p. 10-13).
The rise of scientific academies in the 17th century presented a new challenge to female scholars. Membership was closed to women (except in Italy;Reference SchiebingerSchiebinger, 1991, p.26), even to well-established scientists, yet membership conferred status and authority. The election of Marjory Stephenson and Kathleen Lonsdale to the Royal Society of London came as the culmination of years of campaigning for the place of women in that society (Reference MasonMason, 1992). William Astbury, a Lonsdale contemporary and one of the 12 Fellows who put her name into nomination, wrote in 1943 to Lawrence Bragg, a reluctant supporter of the women’s membership in the Royal Society,
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Many thanks for your letter. I suppose the suggestion was bound to come sooner or later that women should be put up for the Royal Society, and once that is accepted I don’t think you could find a woman candidate more likely than Mrs. Lonsdale to be successful. I should put her at quite the best woman scientist that I know – but that probably is as far as I am prepared to go, because I must confess that I am one of those people that still maintain that there is a creative spark in the male that is absent from women, even though the latter do so often such marvellously conscientious and thorough work after the spark has been struck.
Drs Lonsdale and Stephenson were nominated and elected in 1945, nearly 300 years after the Society’s founding.
Enlightenment-era social analysis both questioned and reinforced long-standing ideas regarding the role of women in society. While Reference RousseauRousseau (1763) and his peers conscripted women’s education to the service of men, others understood the new idea of human progress differently, making the case that women’s equality and women’s education were an essential step in societal evolution (Reference MurrayMurray, 1790;Reference Condorcet and Marquis deCon-dorcet, 1791;Reference De Gougesde Gouges, 1791;Reference WollstonecraftWollstonecraft, 1796). Finding themselves nevertheless unwelcome in the university and scientific community, 18th- and early 19th-century women found alternatives, as had their predecessors in centuries before. In England, economically advantaged women organized ‘blue stocking’ societies for the purpose of scholarly discussion. The French salon continued to provide an intellectual environment for women of economic means (Reference GoodmanGoodman, 1989) while cafes provided a measure of democratization. Similar doors opened elsewhere in Europe (Reference MessbargerMessbarger, 2002), but formal education remained out of reach. William Whewell asserted, in his positive review of Mary (Fairfax) Somerville’s definitive On the connexion of the physical sciences (1824), that few other women would be able to understand the material. Such views remained common long after women gained entry to the academic sphere and the professional scientific laboratory.
As 19th-century women began to gain access to university classrooms, they were in most cases admitted as auditors without the opportunity to earn a degree. Again, women found alternatives. ‘Steamboat ladies’, who had studied at Oxford and Cambridge but were denied degrees due to their sex, travelled to Trinity College, Dublin, where university degrees were awarded ad eundem. As a group, women were formally admitted in the mid-19th century and later as students who might be awarded university degrees. For example, women gained entry in 1833 in the UnitedStates, 1905 in Argentina, 1908 in Germany, 1937 in Iran and 1945 in Japan (Reference Etzkowitz and KemelgorEtzkowitz and Kemelgor, 2001). Female scholars migrated to countries where access came relatively early, for example to Switzerland (1867) and France (1881). Russian women of the 1860s-70s were among the most mobile of the degree-seeking migrants (Reference KoblitzKoblitz, 1988). These pioneers of women’s education in Europe were among the first female students admitted for degrees, and their doctorates were the first for women in mathematics, chemistry, biology and medicine (Reference Goegg and StantonGoegg, 1884, p. 388-389).
By the 1920s, the doors of the university were open to women throughout much of the industrialized world. Demographic changes due to the First World War led some governments to encourage female education as a way to build economic capacity. Pedagogical training became a women’s domain in many countries during this time and women were relatively well represented in medical programs as well. These patterns persist to the present day. The trend toward broader participation by women in the university and the professional workplace would in many countries be reversed during the Great Depression, as women were faulted for taking the place of men in the workforce (Reference TournierTournier, 1973;Reference AlexanderAlexander, 2000;Reference HuttonHutton, 2001, p. 323-364).
In China, women’s scholarly interests were for millennia constrained by a strict social order founded in Confucian teachings, summarized neatly by a proverb attributed to the time of the Ming Dynasty: ‘the lack of talent is a virtue in women’ (Reference HoHo, 1995). The oppression of women varied regionally, however, and, as in the West, some women found scholarly refuge in monastic life and some found opportunity as scientific assistants to husbands, brothers and sons (Reference MeschelMeschel, 1992). By the end of the 19th century, reform-minded scholars were promoting universal education as essential to modernization (Reference Qiao and LiuQiao and Liu, 2009), and by 1917 advocates for women in the New Culture Movement welcomed the first Chinese institution of higher education for women, Beijing Female Normal School Senior Branch (Reference WangWang, 1999, p.9;Reference EdwardsEdwards, 2000).
Chinese women’s access to higher education and opportunity for scientific studies gained legal protection with the 1949 founding of the People’s Republic of China. Most schools became co-educational at that time, although some urban elite secondary schools, the gateway to advanced training, remained gender-segregated until the 1970s (Reference Liu and CarpenterLiu and Carpenter, 2005). Despite the egalitarian goals of the government, attitudes to women’s role in society differed between urban and rural areas, and women everywhere were expected to carry the burden of household chores while also fulfilling their work duties outside the home (Reference AndorsAndors, 1975;Reference DiamondDiamond, 1975;Reference NgoNgo, 2002). In this, their experiences were no different than those of Western women (Reference LonsdaleLonsdale, 1970;Reference HuttonHutton, 2001, p. 209;Reference Schiebinger and GilmartinSchiebinger and Gilmartin, 2010). Nevertheless, some women, primarily urban women, gained access to higher education, and by 1960 more than 20% of university students were women, and 23% of members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences were women (Reference MeschelMeschel, 1992).
The Cultural Revolution brought additional educational reform to China (Reference UngerUnger, 1980) as a new emphasis was placed on vocational training, critical analysis and creativity. Women continued to fare relatively well during this time (Reference WuWu, 2008). After the Cultural Revolution ended in 1976, reforms began anew. Entrance examinations at the secondary level became the gateway into a system with more choices among university-preparatory, vocational and technical schools, and this selection step has had the effect of filtering students by their sex. Today, all but the highest- scoring girls are more likely than boys to make a pragmatic school choice in favor of a shorter pathway to more certain employment and marriage. That is, young women tend to select against the university track, where female graduates face more uncertainty than male graduates, and in favor of vocational training (Reference Broaded and LiuBroaded and Liu, 1996; Reference Liu and CarpenterLiu and Carpenter, 2005). At the end of 2008, about 6% of members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences were women (40 of 692), a decrease that reflects the changing expectations and aspirations of secondary-school students.
Despite vocal prejudice against them (Reference Fuchs, von Stebut and AllmendingerFuchs and others, 2001), German women managed to make modest gains after universities opened to them officially in 1908. These gains were lost in the 1930s, as the Third Reich turned away from the relatively liberal policies of the Weimar Republic. Women were forced out of the university and back into the home (Reference TournierTournier, 1973;Reference HuttonHutton, 2001, p.308), and those who wished to work outside the home were required to remain single (work agreements contained the Zolibats- Klausel, or celibacy clause). Women’s participation in higher education did not start to recover in West Germany until educational reforms began in the 1960s (Reference TournierTournier, 1973).
A similar return to ‘traditional’ cultural values stalled women’s progress in 20th-century Japan. The need for women’s labor during the Russo-Japanese war (1904-05) opened doors through which girls entered school and women entered the workforce (Reference NolteNolte, 1986). Women’s access to education had been facilitated by the Meiji government, although, as elsewhere, the primary goal in educating girls and women was to prepare them to be ‘good wives and wise mothers’ (Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001), not professionals. Following the Second World War, political and business leaders sought stability in a return to the social structure of the past (Reference NolteNolte, 1986;Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001). In 1958, the Ministry of Education promulgated a middle school standard in which girls studied home economics (or ‘domestic science’) and boys studied technology. Junior colleges, established in the 1950s, became a de facto women’s track in higher education (Reference HaradaHarada, 1993). These colleges were not comprehensive, and pedagogical training, domestic science and the humanities dominated curricula leading to occupational certificates and licenses.
Economic changes in the 1970s presented new opportunities for women as Japan turned away from heavy industry and toward high technology. The labor market began to favor flexibility, and a contingent labor force emerged, offering the possibility of accommodation for women’s domestic obligations (Reference Fujimura-FanselowFujimura-Fanselow, 1985;Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001). Women gained some access to science and engineering jobs in this relatively unstable environment but were typically viewed as secondary and suited only to work as laboratory assistants (Reference ColemanColeman, 1999, p. 128-149;Reference KuwaharaKuwa-hara, 2001). A decline in the number of secondary school students interested in science and technology and an impending labor shortage in the 1990s led to active encouragement of women to pursue university degrees in these fields (Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001).
Where they were able to gain admission, ‘pioneer’ women in science often found themselves limited to ghettoized tasks and low pay (Reference TalbotTalbot, 1910;Reference RossiterRossiter, 1980; Reference Etzkowitz and KemelgorEtzkowitz and Kemelgor, 2001;Reference Fuchs, von Stebut and AllmendingerFuchs and others, 2001; Reference Plonski and SaidelPlonski and Saidel, 2001). The rapid expansion of low-wage work for women in astronomical observatories of the late 19th century is well known, but the same phenomenon characterized other disciplines as well. In geology, women worked as illustrators and sample collectors, but the products of their labors were reported by male scientists and the women usually went without credit (Reference Aldrich, Kass-Simon and FarnesAldrich, 1993). Women found professional work in the life sciences, and in home economics or ‘sanitary science’, where interest in chemistry was directed. Pedagogical studies were also encouraged. Women in Mexico gained access to higher education as early as 1890, but were directed toward teacher training at ‘normal schools’, where 20 years later they accounted for 78% of the student population (Reference CortinaCortina, 1989). Both academic advisers and the popular media encouraged women toward these ‘feminine’ disciplines (Reference RossiterRossiter, 1974, Reference Rossiter1980), but upon arrival women found their options for career advancement limited and subject to change according to men’s preferences. For example, women in the USA and UK who entered university departments of geography during the Second World War found their contracts not renewed and new positions more difficult to obtain after the war ended and men returned to the university (Reference MonkMonk, 2004;Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2008). Women were aware of the inequities and prejudice (Reference HayesHayes, 1910;Reference TalbotTalbot, 1910), but found ways to take advantage of opportunities where they arose.
2. Women’s Work
It was into an often unwelcoming academy and with restrictive social expectations (Reference Hansson, Hansson and NorbergHansson, 2009; Reference Lewander, Hansson and NorbergLewander, 2009) that women of the 19th and 20th centuries embarked into alpine and polar research, and into the many areas of specialization within glaciology. It is not possible to profile here all the pioneer women in glaciology and, indeed, a simple encyclopedic accounting offers little substance for analysis. The women presented here are selected with a view toward geographic diversity and data that add detail to persistent themes in women’s representation in the sciences.
Practical, methodical observations of snow and ice have certainly been conducted as long as people have lived and travelled in cold regions, but the history of glaciology as a well-defined scholarly discipline is relatively short. Indeed, a spirited debate regarding its very disciplinary scope can be found in International Glaciological Society (IGS) correspondence at the time of the founding of the Journal of Glaciology (Reference WoodWood, 1986, p. 26-28). Women’s participation in glaciological studies, as represented in the published scientific literature, can be traced back to at least 1902 (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1902), although it should be noted that Mary Somerville (1780-1872) was the first scientist to write about the importance of solar radiation to energy balance at Earth’s surface (Somerville, 1848). The first Journal of Glaciology paper co-authored by a woman appeared within a year of the Journal’s founding (Reference Owston and LonsdaleOwston and Lonsdale, 1948), but female authors remained the exception for much of the Society’s history and account for less than one in five author instances in the Journal and Annals of Glaciology today (Fig. 1). Most of the growth in women’s authorship in the two IGS periodicals occurred in the 1980s and later.
2.1. Expedition
The notion of ‘pioneers’ in glaciology is complicated where people have been living with and observing snow and ice for millennia, and by the different goals of exploration and scientific investigation (Reference RobinsonRobinson, 2006). Antarctica’s remoteness and hostile environment make the case for Antarctic pioneers relatively clear, although as we look backward in time, our vision is limited to only those women whose stories or work survive in the written record. Prior to the 20th century, professional pathways for women were limited. Personal wealth afforded opportunity to step outside expected activities and occupations, as did, occasionally, marriage.
The Western record of women in the Antarctic region begins in 1773 with Louise Seguin, who sailed, undisclosed on the ship’s manifest, with Captain Yves Joseph de Kerguelen aboard the Roland. Seguin’s voyage is known only because it cast a shadow on Kerguelen’s career (Reference ChipmanChipman, 1986). Women make infrequent appearances as captains’ wives among the sealing and whaling parties that followed. These pioneering women are recorded primarily as curiosities in men’s narratives, where their fortitude is cited as exceptional and attributed to the exemplary nature of their husbands (Reference Hansson, Hansson and NorbergHansson, 2009). Nevertheless, European women were sailing, going ashore on sub-Antarctic islands and making observations of the natural world around them by the 1850s. The first European woman to sight the Antarctic continent was a castaway found with three men on Campbell Island in January 1839. The four were taken on board the Enderby Brothers ships Eliza Scott and Sabrina, and continued south to within sight of the continent. The woman’s name was not recorded in the captain’s journal.
The women of Remote Oceania were sailing and navigating the Pacific centuries before European sailors arrived (Reference D’ArcyD’Arcy, 2006, p. 90;Reference HufferHuffer, 2008). Some of these women may have ventured to the sub-Antarctic to witness icebergs and snowy islands, as the great explorers Ui-te- rangiora and Te Ara-tanga-nuku are reported to have done in about 650 and 1000ce, respectively (Reference Ariki-tara-areAriki-tara-are, 1919). Unfortunately, oral history transcriptions were influenced by the gendered nature of early anthropological research, and details regarding women’s participation in Pacific navigation have been lost (Reference HufferHuffer, 2008).
The first account of the sub-Antarctic in a woman’s own voice is the journal of Abby Jane (Wood) Morrell, who sailed aboard the schooner Antarctic with her husband Captain Benjamin Morrell (Reference MorrellMorrell, 1833). In the conclusion to her narrative of three years at sea, Morrell expresses a keen awareness of both her skill as an observer and what lack of access to formal scientific training has cost her:
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The great difficulty we women feel in collecting information, is the want of order and classification of our thoughts … I doubt whether a scientific observer would have had more thoughts than passed through my teeming brain; but he would have known how to arrange them, and have drawn conclusions tending to establish known truths, or elicit new ones; while whatever observations or conclusions I might make were liable to be dispersed for not knowing where to preserve them. The unstudied and unpracticed mind, however, observes many things that might escape the notice of the best educated.
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(Reference MorrellMorrell, 1833, p.223-224)
The first women to winter over on the Antarctic continent travelled south, like Abby Jane Morrell, in the company of their husbands. Edith M. ‘Jackie’ Ronne and Jennie Darlington helped establish a station on Stonington Island in Marguerite Bay on the Antarctic Peninsula as members of the Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition of 1946-48. Both women wrote accounts of their journeys that conformed to the gender order of the era, although Ronne was more optimistic about women’s (nurturing) role in polar exploration than was Darlington (Reference RonneRonne, 1950, Reference Ronne2004; Reference Darlington and McllvaineDarlington and Mcllvaine, 1957). Jackie Ronne was an active participant in the work of the expedition, filing news reports of the team’s progress, learning to operate the expedition’s seismic observation equipment, and making tide height observations at Marguerite Bay (B. Shoemaker, unpublished information).
Some of the first women to publish their observations of snow and ice in the scientific literature were part adventurer and part scientific observer, not unlike their male contemporaries. Fanny Bullock Workman, traveller, mountaineer and surveyor, reported her observations of glaciers in the Himalaya and Karakoram to the Royal Geographical Society and the Geographical Society of America, and wrote popular accounts of her travels in that region. Elizabeth (Fulton) Parker and Mary Morris (Vaux) Walcott both arrived to alpine studies as tourists, but as is the case for many glaciologists, the mountain landscapes captured their imaginations and changed the course of their lives. None of these women had the advantage of formal scientific training, yet all contributed to glacier studies at the turn of the 20th century.
2.1.1. Fanny Bullock Workman
Born to a wealthy family in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA, Fanny Bullock (1859-1925) preferred adventure to the quiet life her social status might have conferred. Bullock attended finishing school in New York and Europe before returning to Worcester, where she met and married William Hunter Workman, a physician and avid mountaineer, in 1881 (Reference James, James and BoyerJames and others, 1971, p. 672). Their daughter Rachel was born in 1884. An 1886 trip to Europe, during which Bullock Workman made her first Alpine ascents, changed the course of the family’s life. Dr Workman gave up his medical practice, the couple took up bicycle touring, and Bullock Workman began to write popular accounts of their travels through Europe, the Mediterranean and the Far East. By the turn of the century, the Workmans had moved on to a new form of travel adventure, mountaineering. Fanny learned the essentials of surveying, and the Workmans became alpine expeditioners, folding measurements of glaciers and mountain peaks into their work and publishing the results in the scientific literature and popular books (Reference Bullock Workman and WorkmanBullock Workman and Workman, 1900;Reference Bullock WorkmanBullock Workman, 1906, Reference Bullock Workman1912).
The Workmans’ daughter Rachel (later Lady MacRobert; 1884-1954) earned a degree in geology at the University of London in 1911. She went on to postgraduate research as a member of Imperial College, publishing papers on the igneous petrology of Scotland and Sweden (Reference Workman MacRobertWorkman MacRobert, 1914; Reference Burek, Lewis and KnellBurek, 2009), regions in which she also investigated glacial geomorphology. Rachel Workman was among the first women elected, 112 years after its founding, to Fellowship in the Geological Society of London. She had campaigned for this access and, upon gaining it, wrote to her husband, Sir Alexander MacRobert,
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I am very much amused at the first list of 16 women admitted to the F.G.S. There are one or two notabilities the others merely wives. It is obvious why they were admitted at this juncture. They are badly needing additional subscriptions so the female subscriber has a financial value if none other. Poor downtrodden race!
In this, she echoed her mother’s sensibility about women’s status in the sciences and society. Lady MacRobert is perhaps most well known for ‘MacRobert’s Reply’, a Short Stirling bomber purchased by the Royal Air Force with a donation she made in honor of her two sons lost during the Second World War.
2.1.2. Elizabeth Parker
After earning a teaching certificate at the Truro Normal School in Nova Scotia, Canada, 18-year-old Elizabeth Fulton (1856-1944) married Henry John Parker and soon moved to Winnipeg, where she participated in local literary societies and raised four children (Reference ThomasThomas, 1948). A complaint in 1904 to the Manitoba Free Press about poor coverage of literary events resulted in a job offer and a 36year career in journalism, a post that would later facilitate her campaign for the creation of the Alpine Club of Canada (Winnipeg Free Press, 1944). Parker had developed a lifelong interest in the Canadian Rockies and mountaineering during an 18 month trip to Banff with her children. Collaborating with western land surveyor Arthur Wheeler, Parker wrote the text for the first book detailing the glaciers and other features of the Selkirk Mountains, Canada (Reference Wheeler and ParkerWheeler and Parker, 1912). Her advocacy led the Canadian Alpine Club to be the first such organization to admit women.
2.1.3. Mary Morris Walcott
Mary Morris (Vaux) Walcott (1860-1940) is remembered today for both her botanical illustrations and the glacier and mineral studies she conducted with her brothers in the Canadian Rockies. Mary Vaux began studies as a watercolorist at the age of eight, continuing her training as an illustrator via private tutoring and as a student at the Friends Select School in Philadelphia, USA, which she attended from 1869 to 1879. Following the death of her mother in 1880, Vaux assumed the role of household manager and worked on the family dairy farm. An 1887 trip to the Canadian Rockies with her father and brothers, lawyer and mineralogist George Vaux, Jr, and architect William Vaux, so inspired the family that they returned repeatedly, photographing and measuring the glaciers of the Selkirk Mountains, publishing the results of their work (Reference VauxVaux, 1911, Reference Vaux and Vaux1913; Reference VauxVaux and Vaux, 1911) and showing their photographs in juried exhibits of the Photographic Society of Philadelphia. The trips were more than a summer adventure for Mary Vaux;they opened the door to her career as a botanist and botanical illustrator (Reference WalcottWalcott, 1925).
2.1.4. Louise Arner Boyd
Louise Arner Boyd (1887-1972; Fig. 2) began her Arctic expeditions in an attempt to find Roald Amundsen after he disappeared in his own 1928 attempt to find the explorer Umberto Nobile. Boyd did not find any evidence of Amundsen’s fate, but her interest in the Arctic led to a series of scientific expeditions to northeastern Greenland and the Arctic Ocean between 1931 and 1938. Her scientific parties observed glaciers, fjords and adjacent ocean regions. Boyd took thousands of photographs, documented carefully for use by American Geographical Society cartographers. In her 1932 report on an expedition to Franz Josef and King Oscar Fiords in eastern Greenland (Reference BoydBoyd, 1932), she remarked on differences from past maps, suggesting ‘[the] possibilities of glacial retreat should not be overlooked’. Bathymetric observations made during Boyd’s expeditions (Reference BoydBoyd, 1948) led to such discoveries as a sea-floor ridge between Jan Mayen and Bear Islands. In 1941 she was sponsored by the United States National Bureau of Standards to study the effects of magnetic fields on radio communications in the Arctic. Boyd’s papers and books on her work in the Arctic and elsewhere were well received in the scientific community (JMW, 1935;Reference HobbsHobbs, 1936).
2.2. Adaptation
Dr Ida Ogilvie and Ebba Hult De Geer, both of whom studied geology at the turn of the 20th century, made contributions in the area of glacial geology by adapting themselves to fit the opportunities available to women at the time. Ogilvie, a pioneer in women’s geological education in the United States, turned to glacial geology at the turn of the 20th century, a time when the research field was wide open. Hult De Geer began her studies on varves and geochronology as an assistant to her husband, the eminent Quaternary geologist Gerard De Geer (Reference BaileyBailey, 1943), a framework that provided access but limited the recognition her work received.
2.2.1. Ida Ogilvie
Ida Ogilvie’s (1874-1963) parents expected to raise a socialite, teaching her French before English and sending her to Europe for art education. Ogilvie preferred independence and enrolled at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, where she discovered geology (Reference WoodsWoods, 1964). At Bryn Mawr, she worked with Dr Florence Bascom, a pioneering mineralogist and petrologist who mentored the first cohort of female geology students in the United States (Reference Aldrich, Kass-Simon and FarnesAldrich, 1993). Graduating with a BA in 1900, Ogilivie began graduate work at the University of Chicago with T.C. Chamberlain and R.D. Salisbury, from whom she gained an appreciation for glacial geology. Returning to New York, she completed her PhD in 1903 at Columbia University (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1905) and was appointed lecturer at Barnard College, a women’s college founded in 1889 after Columbia refused to admit women.
While her first interest was petrology, Ogilvie recognized that if she wanted to teach graduate students (across the street) at Columbia, she would need to develop an area of expertise in which Columbia was deficient. She looked to glacial geology, where her work included analysis of glacial landforms in the Champlain Lake Valley and elsewhere in the Adirondack Mountains (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1902) and field studies of the effect of debris cover on alpine glaciers (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1904). She went on to teach successful and popular courses on glacial geology for many years.
The First World War brought another change in course to Ogilvie’s career, as she became a leader in the US federal ‘Food Will Win the War’ campaign. Associate Professor of Geology by that time, she worked with the Dean of Barnard College to found the Women’s Agricultural Camp in Bedford, New York. The goal of the program was to recruit young women to farming in order to fill a growing labor shortage. The program was successful and Ogilvie went on to organize the Women’s Land Army of America. Twenty thousand young women went to work on farms between 1917 and 1919 as part of the war effort. Ogilivie maintained her interest in agricultural science after the war and, while she continued teaching and mentoring students at Barnard, her attention was divided between geology and new administrative and research interests in agriculture. Her last publication, the abstract of a talk given to the New York Academy of Sciences in 1916, involved field observations of till sheets in the midwestern United States and their interpretation with respect to the number of glacial ages recorded by these deposits (Reference OgilvieOgilvie, 1916).
2.2.2. Ebba Hult De Geer
Ebba Hult (1882-1969) followed a pattern well established for female scientists of the 19th century: private assistant to a male family member (Reference SchiebingerSchiebinger, 1991, p. 260-261). Hult met Professor Gerard De Geer (1858-1943) in 1907 while a student in his class at Stockholm University. Swedish universities had opened to women in 1873, as part of a national response to the large number of unmarried and widowed women who needed employment (Reference Elgqvist-Saltzman, Mackinnon, Elgqvist-Saltzman and PrenticeElgqvist-Saltz-man, 1998). De Geer proposed marriage, together with a job offer, while Hult was still a student. She agreed, suggesting a 5 year plan that included completion of her academic degree, and the two were married in 1908 (Reference BergwikBergwik, 2009). Hult De Geer’s work as assistant to the professor continued until his death 35 years later, but the degree was never completed.
Ebba Hult De Geer’s marriage allowed her to conduct scientific research that might otherwise have been beyond her reach (Reference BergwikBergwik, 2009). Working together with students in their Stockholm University laboratory, the De Geers established that the varved clays deposited in glacial lakes at the former margins of the Scandinavian ice sheet were geochronometers, with which paleoclimate might be investigated (Reference De GeerDe Geer, 1912, Reference De Geer1934; Reference Hult De Geer and WadellHult De Geer and Wadell, 1928). The late-Quaternary Swedish timescale they produced was more precise and accurate than any other of its time. Gerard and Ebba recognized the importance of identifying global patterns in climate variability and made trips to examine varved deposits around the world. Hult De Geer continued to improve the Swedish geologic timescale after her husband’s death (Reference Hult De GeerHult De Geer, 1954) and published her own novel work, but while Gerard De Geer is lauded in the history of geochronology, Ebba Hult De Geer’s contributions are seldom mentioned.
2.3. Innovation
2.3.1. Dame Kathleen Lonsdale, DBE FRS
‘The crystalline structure of ice’ was the subject of the first paper authored by a woman to appear in an IGS publication (Reference Owston and LonsdaleOwston and Lonsdale, 1948). Owston and Lonsdale used diffraction patterns generated by bombarding ice at different temperatures with X-rays to study its structure. In the Journal, they proposed that the hydrogen atoms in ice crystals vibrate continuously in the space between oxygen atom pairs and that the frequency of the vibration depends on temperature. X-ray crystallographer Kathleen Lonsdale (1903-71; Fig. 3) is perhaps most widely recognized for her experimental work on benzene (Reference LonsdaleLonsdale, 1929) and careful calculations of crystal space groups, but her contributions to crystallography and crystal dynamics spanned a range of topics, including water ice (Reference Owston and LonsdaleOwston and Lonsdale, 1948;Reference LonsdaleLonsdale, 1958).
Kathleen Yardley excelled at school, but her interests and abilities exceeded the offerings at the girls’ school in Ilford, England, to which Jessie Yardley had moved her six children to escape unrest in Ireland. Yardley was allowed in her last 2 years to attend courses at the County High School for Boys where physics, chemistry and advanced mathematics were taught. Having earned a scholarship, she entered the University of London Bedford College for Women at age 16 and went on to earn the highest score in the 1922 BSc (Hons) physics examination. Her performance on the exam so impressed crystallographer Sir William H. Bragg that he invited her to join his research group at the University College of London. A year later the group moved to London’s Royal Institution (RI). Yardley remained at the RI until 1927, when she married Thomas Lonsdale, a textile chemist. Untypically for his time, Lonsdale assumed that his wife would continue with her scientific work after marriage (Reference HodgkinsHodgkins, 1975).
The Lonsdales followed Thomas’s career to Leeds, where Kathleen found laboratory space in the university Department of Physics. She conducted her groundbreaking work on benzene there, using equipment she assembled for that purpose. The first of their three children was born in 1929 and the family returned to London soon thereafter, again following Thomas’s employment. The return to London interrupted Kathleen’s experimental work, but she adapted to the changed circumstances, turning to the numerous calculations required to determine crystal structures from X- ray images (Reference Astbury and YardleyAstbury and Yardley, 1924). This work was facilitated by small grants arranged by William Bragg, at Lonsdale’s suggestion, for the purpose of hiring a housekeeper (Reference LonsdaleLonsdale, 1970).
Soon after her marriage, Lonsdale applied for the 1851 Exhibition Fellowship, a prestigious research grant awarded by the British crown. In declining her application, the Commissioners of the fellowship told her that ‘they would be breaking the spirit of the regulations in awarding an exhibition to a married woman’. This reaction to Lonsdale’s application reflects a common view in post-war societies, that women who had joined the labor force as part of the war effort should return to the home and ‘traditional’ gender roles (Reference BaldwinBaldwin, 2009). Lonsdale confronted similar attitudes to women in science throughout her career. In 1957 she helped draft a Royal Society report about the state of science education in British schools that, due to Lonsdale’s persistence, recognized the pervasiveness of prejudices against women obtaining advanced science education. The report was suppressed by the President of the Royal Society (Reference BaldwinBaldwin, 2009).
Dame Kathleen Lonsdale’s scientific career was long, successful and multidimensional. She was a vocal advocate for women in science, worked for prison reform in the UK, and, as a pacifist, was willing to go to jail (where she carried on some computations regarding anomalous reflections in X-ray patterns) for her beliefs. In ‘Women scientists – why so few?’ Reference LonsdaleLonsdale (1971) wrote about the challenges women face in confronting cultural norms:
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She must go against all her early training and not care if she is regarded as a little peculiar. She must be willing to accept additional responsibility, even if she feels that she has more than enough. But above all, she must learn to concentrate in any available moment and not require ideal conditions in which to do so.
She asserted that for married women, a partner willing to take an equal share in household responsibilities was essential. Lonsdale benefited from having such a partner but also from her own ability to develop networks among her colleagues and adapt to changing circumstances as they arose.
2.3.2. Eleanora Bliss Knopf
Structural petrologist Eleanora Bliss Knopf (1883-1974) made an early appearance in the Journal of Glaciology, as ghostwriter for the posthumous publication of Max H. Demorest’s work on instantaneous recrystallization ofglacier ice (Reference DemorestDemorest, 1953;Reference KnopfKnopf, 1953). Demorest’s notes were given to Knopf by his widow, following his death in Greenland during the Second World War. Eleanora Bliss was a contemporary of Ida Ogilvie, under the mentorship of Florence Bascom at Bryn Mawr College (Reference Aldrich, Kass-Simon and FarnesAldrich, 1993). Bliss spent 5 years as curator of the college geological museum before beginning her doctoral work at the University of California, Berkeley. Completing her PhD at Bryn Mawr College in 1912, she joined the United States Geological Survey (USGS) as a geologic ‘aide’. Bliss married fellow geologist Adolph Knopf in 1920 and followed him to Yale University, where she continued her work for the USGS on a contract basis and taught private courses. Her influential text on petrofabrics (Reference Knopf and IngersonKnopf and Ingerson, 1938) was written during this time. Following Adolph Knopf’s retirement in 1951, the couple moved to California, where he was given a courtesy faculty appointment at Stanford University and Eleanora was appointed research associate. She continued with petrographic research until her death in 1974.
2.3.3. Isobel Moira Dunbar, OC FRSC
Moira Dunbar (1918-99) was a pioneer in Arctic sea-ice observation and the use of remotely sensed data for sea-ice research. Dunbar studied geography at Oxford University, earning a BA (Hons) in 1939 (St Anne’s College) and completing her MA in 1948. Her career in sea-ice research began soon after she arrived in Canada on a visitor’s permit in 1947. Learning that the federal government needed trained geographers, she applied and was assigned to the Joint Intelligence Bureau of Canada. Her first assignment was editing a book of Arctic terrain and sea-ice descriptions and photographs, written by two air force navigators (Reference Greenaway and ColthorpeGreenaway and Colthorpe, 1948). From there she moved up to Scientific Staff Officer in the Arctic Research Section of the Defense Research Board of Canada.
Dunbar’s interest in sea ice quickly exceeded the confines of photographs and offices and in 1954 she applied for a post on a Department of Transport icebreaker. Her request was turned down but she persisted, moving up the chain of command until in 1955 a deputy minister approved the posting. Dunbar commented about this, ‘There were so many people against taking me up that the matter went right up to Deputy Minister level. However, he decided I was probably harmless’ (The Herald, 1999). Better than harmless, Dunbar proved to be good company and continued to serve on icebreakers for many years. Recognizing the value in airborne observation, she reprised her role as a campaigner for access to a strictly male enterprise, eventually gaining a place on Royal Canadian Air Force operational flights into the High Arctic. She logged a total of 560 hours on the Argus ice patrol aircraft before retiring (Reference GoldGold, 2002). A colleague reflected on her tenacity, ‘You didn’t want to be between where Moira was and where Moira wanted to be. She knew what she wanted to do and what she was doing’ (personal communication from W. , 2010).
Throughout her career, Moira Dunbar was an innovator, developing new tools and methodologies for sea-ice research. Working with Keith Greenaway, she pioneered the use of airborne photography for sea-ice observation (Reference Dunbar and GreenawayDunbar and Greenaway, 1956) and went on to investigate the use of radar remote sensing for sea-ice studies (Reference DunbarDunbar, 1975). Dunbar was a proponent of winter navigation in the Gulf of St Lawrence and worked to standardize sea-ice terminology (Reference Dunbar, Armstrong, Roberts, Swithinbank and TsurikovDunbar and others, 1965). Recognizing the substantial contributions made by Russian scientists to sea- ice studies, she studied the language and qualified as a Russian linguist in 1958.
Moira Dunbar’s creative talents extended far beyond the scientific laboratory. She performed with the Oxford University Drama Society, worked as a professional actor during the Second World War and wrote popular articles about the history of Arctic exploration. A passage from ‘Man and ice: experience with the frozen ocean’ captures both her sensibility and her wit:
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The first people who really became familiar with the ice were, of course, the Inuit. They lived amid ice. They used it as a highway and as a platform to hunt from, and they did not try to fight it. It was only the Europeans who tried to force their way through the ice in order to get somewhere else. The Inuit did not want to be somewhere else; they were quite happy where they were.
2.3.4. Jean M. Grove
Jean Mary Clark (1927-2001) was born into a scientific family. Her mother, Mary (Johnson) Clark, was among the first female research chemists at the University of Cambridge, UK. As a student at Newnham College, Cambridge, Mary Johnson placed above all the men in her cohort at the conclusion of the natural science courses in 1917, yet could not continue on because women were ineligible for higher degrees at Cambridge at that time (Rayner-Canham and Reference Rayner-Canham and Rayner-CanhamRayner-Canham, 2008, p. 233). She instead took a job as a research chemist, but resigned at the time of her marriage to a colleague. Mary and Leslie Clark’s daughters, Jean and Margaret, grew up enjoying family mountaineering trips in Scotland and Norway, and both followed their mother’s path to Newnham College.
Jean Clark completed her undergraduate work in geography in 1948 and continued on with research for her master’s degree while working as assistant lecturer in geography at Bedford College, London. Founded in 1849, Bedford was the first women’s college in the UK. While still an undergraduate, she joined the first of several research expeditions to Jotunheimen, Norway, with Vaughan Lewis and others from Cambridge. The team investigated many aspects of glacier activity in the region, producing papers on both glacial erosion (Reference ClarkClark, 1951) and glacier flow (Reference ClarkClark and Lewis, 1951). Fieldwork conducted in 1952 and 1953 on Veslskautbreen and Veslgjuvbreen formed the basis for her doctoral thesis, ‘A study of the physiography of certain glaciers in Norway’. The PhD was awarded in 1956, 2 years after she married fellow geographer Dick Grove and the year after their first child was born. Five more children joined the family between 1956 and 1971.
Jean Grove continued to conduct fieldwork in Norway and the Alps, but over time her attention turned to Holocene climate variability. Combining traditional approaches such as dendrochronology and ice-core analyses with innovative archival work, she assembled detailed records of glacier variations around the world and used these records to examine spatial variability in climate change. This research led to the widely-read text The Little Ice Age (Reference GroveGrove, 1988). A second, more expansive compilation of her research, in progress at the time of her death, was published in 2004 (Reference GroveGrove, 2004).
Grove was appointed lecturer and director of studies at Girton College, Cambridge, in 1953 and was elected to Fellowship in the College in 1960 (H.D. Allen, http://www.quaternary.group.cam.ac.uk/history/others/Grove.html). She remained director of studies until her retirement in 1994 and was very involved in student life at Girton throughout, encouraging students to engage in fieldwork and improving access for students from state schools. Bringing her children to the mountains, as was her own childhood experience, allowed Grove to continue fieldwork in the midst of a growing family and considerable administrative responsibilities at Girton. But it was also during these years that she turned to historical studies of glacier variations, an activity that was more adaptable to life with a large family. Grove also benefited from a supportive husband who shared childcare responsibilities, and from the labor of hired au pairs (Reference GoudieGoudie, 2001, p. 283-287; Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2009).
2.3.5. Cuchlaine A.M. King
Born into an academic family, Cuchlaine King (b. 1922; Fig. 4) and her sister Margaret both earned BAs in Geography at Cambridge, in 1943 and 1942 respectively. Both followed their father, the eminent geologist William B.R. King, OBE MC FRS, into war service. Cuchlaine King joined the Women’s Royal Naval Service and went on to work in the meteorological services and as a surveyor with Cambridge professor Frank Debenham. Many women were recruited into both teaching and military service as geographers during the Second World War, but for most their jobs ended at the conclusion of the war (Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2008).
King continued in geography at Cambridge after the war, completing her doctoral dissertation on the movement of sand on beaches in 1949 (Reference King and WilliamsKing and Williams, 1949). Her work with Professor William Williams synthesized field observations and laboratory experiments in a quantitative style that moved the discipline forward. In his enthusiastic review of her text Beaches and coasts, Reference BalchinBalchin (1960) wrote that the book offered ‘a new and unique approach with a mathematical and quantitative treatment’. King continued to study coastal processes throughout her career but also investigated glacial processes in landscape evolution, an interest she developed at Cambridge while working with Debenham and Vaughan Lewis.
Fieldwork was essential to King’s research and, like Moira Dunbar in Canada, she set precedents in the Arctic for other women to follow. Her first research trips to Iceland with Jack Ives came not by invitation but at her suggestion (Reference Ives and KingIves and King, 1954, Reference Ives and King1955;Reference King and IvesKing and Ives, 1955, Reference King and Ives1956). When King inquired, Ives replied that he had never thought of including women, but responded positively, suggesting that some other women come along for ‘company’ (Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2009, p.239). King participated in the Cambridge expeditions to Austerdalsbreen, a small Norwegian glacier where dozens of students were trained in projects that laid the foundation for post-war glaciological research in the UK (Reference NyeNye, 1997). She worked again with Ives on Baffin Island in the mid-1960s (where accommodation away from the men’s quarters was required by the US Air Force), and led many field projects of her own design.
Dr King joined the Faculty of Geography at University College, Nottingham, in 1951, where she remained until her retirement. She proceeded up the ranks, with promotion from assistant lecturer to lecturer in 1953, to reader in 1962 and finally professor in 1969. In an interview about the course of her career at Nottingham, King recalled the promotion to professor: ‘I remember Professor Edwards saying that he [a male colleague] should have the professorship first although he thought I probably deserved it.’ When asked why she had been passed over, King suggested ‘perhaps they didn’t want a lady professor’ (Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2009, p.238) but did not bear any ill will about it, noting that postponing administrative duties allowed more time for research. King also reflected that never having married allowed her to devote more energy to research and teaching than might otherwise have been possible (Reference SackSack, 2004).
2.3.6. Laura Levi
Cuchlaine King and Moira Dunbar were together responsible for all but one of the first-authored research papers by women in the first two decades of the Journal of Glaciology. The one exception is ‘Experimental study of non-basal dislocations in ice crystals’ by Reference Levi, Achaval and SuraskiLevi and others (1965). Dr Laura Levi published 68 scientific papers, many on ice in the atmosphere, during her long and productive career as a crystallographer and atmospheric physicist.
Laura Levi (1915-2003) was born in Parma, Italy, into a family of scholars. Her father, Beppo (1875-1961), and his brother Eugenio were both distinguished mathematicians, and Beppo’s brother Decio was an engineer. Both Eugenio and Decio were killed in the First World War. Beppo Levi is most widely known for his eponymous lemma regarding the exchange of integration and limits using the Lebesgue integral but should also be remembered for his work on algebraic surfaces, among other contributions. The family moved in 1928, when Professor Levi accepted an appointment in the Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Bologna. Laura Levi studied physics there, completing her PhD, ‘Ferroelectric properties of Rochelle salt’, in 1938. This was the same year she lost her Italian citizenship.
Neither the Levi family’s anti-fascist politics nor their ethnicity created a problem until Mussolini’s 1938 Manifesto on race. With that, Jewish Italian scholars lost their jobs, and most sought refuge abroad. Professional relationships Beppo Levi had developed while managing the Bolletino della Unione Matematica Italiana proved important at this juncture. An invitation to become the founding director of the Institute of Mathematics at the National University in Rosario, Argentina, allowed the family to follow a well-worn emigrant trail from Italy to Argentina in 1939 (Reference LeviLevi, 1998). The influx of European scholars between the world wars invigorated an Argentine university system that, in the decades ahead, would become a field upon which political battles were waged (Reference StreetStreet, 1981;Reference StaccoStacco, 2002;Reference OrtizOrtiz, 2003).
Laura Levi’s early research carried forward the themes from her student years in Italy. Her first published work, a study at the Arapey hot springs in Uruguay, was completed while an assistant in the University of Montevideo Institute of Physics, an appointment she held from 1942 to 1946. Levi returned to Argentina in 1947, and for the next 10 years investigated ferromagnetic materials and other topics in crystallography in the Department of Physics at the National University of La Plata and with the Institute for Scientific and Technological Research for Defense (Reference LeviLevi, 1956). Despite ongoing political upheaval, often accompanied by restructuring of the education system (Reference StreetStreet, 1981), the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) grew and founded new research groups, including an Institute of Atmospheric Physics. Laura Levi joined the multidisciplinary group within the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences in 1957. Among their charges was the investigation of cloud physics and hail, a theme in which Levi found a place for her interest in crystallography (Reference Jaccard and LeviJaccard and Levi, 1961;Reference Levi, Achaval and SuraskiLevi and others, 1965;Reference Arias, Levi and LubartArias and others, 1966).
Levi’s ice crystal studies served her well in 1966 when, in the aftermath of the coup led by General Juan Carlos Onganfa, she was able to obtain an invitation to the Hokkaido University Institute of Low Temperature Science, Japan. The ‘Revolucion Argentina’ instituted a number of reforms, including suspension, on 28 July 1966, of the University Reform of 1918. The Reform of 1918, initiated by students at the National University of Cordoba (UNC), granted autonomous governance to the university system and led to modernization of science curricula. The Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences at UBA voted to reject Onganfa’s order, and on 29 July federal police swept students and faculty from the Faculty of Science and other university buildings. The police employed considerable violence in what became known as ‘la Noche de los Bastones Largos’ (the Night of the Long Batons) and raids were conducted at universities throughout the country. In the months that followed, the president of UBA, deans and professors resigned their positions and sought refuge abroad, Laura Levi among them.
Levi continued her studies on the electrical properties of ice, while also investigating crystal growth in the atmosphere, during her years away from Argentina, first at Hokkaido and then from 1967 to 1968 at the Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research in Davos. Levi had earlier collaborated with Claude Jaccard on the segregation of impurities in ice crystals, a topic of considerable interest in the context of crystal growth in the atmosphere (Reference Jaccard and LeviJaccard and Levi, 1961). At Davos, Levi pioneered the use of wind-tunnel experiments to study hail formation under varying atmospheric conditions (Reference Levi, Aufdermaur, Riehl and EngelhardtLevi and Aufdermaur, 1969, 1970). The experimental work was later expanded to include numerical modeling and comparison between laboratory and natural hail samples (Reference LeviLevi and others, 1970).
Returning to Argentina in 1969, Levi held appointments at several institutes, including the National Atomic Energy Commission, where she continued her crystallographic work on accreted ice and other materials (Reference LeviLevi, 1970, Reference Levi1973). Levi tackled a new challenge in 1973, the creation of an Atmospheric Physics program in the Faculty of Mathematics, Astronomy and Physics at UNC (Reference Weissmann, Nasello and LubartWeissmann and others, 2003). Founded in 1613 (originally as the University of Tucuman), UNC was Argentina’s first university and is among the oldest universities in the Americas. The group maintained an important foothold for applied physics during a time when Argentine universities were held suspect by the government and scientific research was not recognized as contributing to the national economic endeavor. From the 1980s forward, Levi’s hail studies diversified to include not only experimental and analytical work but the development of hail parameterizations for meteorological models and validation of those models using severe storm observations. She remained actively engaged in glaciological research into her eighties;her last e-mail to a scientific collaborator was sent only a few days before her death.
In her early twenties, Laura Levi escaped European fascism only to arrive at the advent of political turmoil in Argentina. Over the next six decades, Levi never gave up on science, or on its place in the human endeavor and the development of Argentina. From the 1960s to the end of the 1980s, Argentine universities and scientific institutes were subject to frequent political purges (Reference WadeWade, 1976), conditions that make Levi’s contributions to glaciology all the more remarkable. In addition to research, she had a keen interest in photography, exhibiting her work in public shows, and in philosophy, participating in philosophical study groups and always ready for a conversation about art, literature, politics or science. Students and colleagues remember Levi for her dedication to science and to the community in which she lived (Reference Weissmann, Nasello and LubartWeissmann and others, 2003).
2.3.7. Hilda Richardson
As did many young women of her generation, Hilda Bentley (1924-2000) went to work for the war effort as soon as she graduated from secondary school. At the end of the Second World War she left the UK Meteorological Office and entered Newnham College, Cambridge, to study geography. A student of Vaughan Lewis and Gordon Manley, she participated in the Cambridge Austerdalsbreen expeditions (Reference NyeNye, 1997) and formed lifelong friendships with other snow and ice enthusiasts. During this time, the dormant Association for the Study of Snow and Ice at Cambridge was revived as the British Glaciological Society (BGS). After completing her MA in Geography in 1948, Hilda Bentley went to work for the Unilever company in their market research division at Port Sunlight, near Liverpool (Reference OmmanneyOmman-ney, 2001;personal communication from A. Thomson, 2010). Hilda married Eric Richardson, a fellow Cambridge geographer, in September 1950.
The BGS and its flagship publication the Journal of Glaciology were growing steadily by 1950 and needed both a permanent home and an organizational leader. The home was found at the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI) in Cambridge and the decision was made to create a full-time position of Secretary to the BGS. The first person hired to the position resigned after a year and Hilda Richardson was hired in late 1953 as the Society’s only employee (Reference WoodWood, 1986, p. 85-86). Reflecting changes in the Society during Richardson’s tenure, the name would change to Glacio- logical Society in 1962 and International Glaciological Society in 1971. Her position title was amended to Secretary General in 1977.
At the time of Richardson’s hiring, the BGS leadership had begun to consider its role in supporting glaciological research during the upcoming International Geophysical Year (IGY, 1957-58). IGY activities raised the profile of glaciological research in the international scientific community, and Richardson began a series of careful conversations regarding internationalization of the BGS. A firm believer in change when change was needed, Richardson listened to her constituent community and moved forward as a strong advocate for the Society’s role as an international leader and facilitator of scholarly exchanges. She carried those standards throughout her tenure as Secretary General.
The Society’s role as an intellectual hub for the glaciological community matured under Hilda Richardson’s stewardship as Secretary General. She defined the position and its responsibilities, and in so doing moved the Society forward. International Symposia, today a hallmark of the Society, took shape under her guidance. She extended the embrace of Society membership and participation in its activities to all regions of the world and encouraged diversification of the Society’s management. As soon as her position became full-time, she joined Soroptimist International (SI), a professional women’s organization. She was able to leverage travel and personal connections established through SI and the IGS for the betterment of both organizations. The Richardson Medal for outstanding service to the IGS and to glaciology was created upon her retirement in 1993, as a testament to her fundamental contributions to the discipline of glaciology.
2.3.8. Yang Zhenniang
Chinese glaciological research began in earnest in 1958, with the establishment of a glacier investigation base in Lanzhou, Gansu Province. The Chinese Academy of Sciences approved the creation of a Glaciology and Geocryology Division within its Institute of Geography in 1962, and in 1965 this became the Lanzhou Institute of Glaciology, Geocryology and Desert Research. The institute grew under the guidance of Professor Shi Yafeng, as a few new university graduates were assigned research positions each year. Glaciological research activity slowed between 1966 and 1976 (Reference Zhang and YangZhang and Yang, 2008), as the national scientific effort was redirected toward solving practical problems. Following the Cultural Revolution, the Lanzhou Institute divided into two parts, one for Glaciology and Geocryology and the other for Desert Research. Four women, Yang Zhenniang and Lai Zuming, both of whom specialized in glacio-hydrology, Wu Xiaoling, who specialized in ice-core studies, and Zhang Shuanying, who specialized in remote sensing, were among the pioneers of glaciological research in China. Women in the early generations of Chinese glaciologists did not encounter the educational prejudices common for women in the West, but did face the same challenges of balancing research and domestic responsibilities.
Yang Zhenniang (b. 1936) was born to a Chinese traditional-medicine family who had lived for many generations in Indonesia. After 1949, Yang’s older and younger brothers returned to China, where there were new opportunities and a chance to help shape the country’s future. Encouraged by her father, Yang followed her brothers’ path to Nanjing in 1953, where she completed her secondary school education. Her first interest was, in the family tradition, medicine, but her university placement exam scores led to the East China Technical University of Water Resources, where she studied land hydrology from 1955 to 1960.
Upon completion of her degree in hydrology, Yang was assigned to the National Department of Hydrology and Power in Beijing, where she worked for a year before being reassigned to the new glacier research group in Lanzhou. Her first project at Lanzhou involved flood prediction for glacier and snow-fed streams in the Tien Shan. The work was reported in both the Chinese scientific literature and the popular news. Following this start, she went on to specialize in glacier hydrology. As glacier research slowed during the Cultural Revolution, Yang developed methods for studying and preventing debris flows and worked on the institute’s farm, where she was often assigned to provide day care for other workers’ children.
After the Cultural Revolution, Yang returned to glacio- logical studies and broadened her research program to include other cold region processes. In 1984 she founded a cold region hydrology program in the Qilian Shan, along the border between Qinghai and Gansu Provinces in northern China. The many small streams flowing northeast from the Qilian Shan support irrigated agriculture in the lowlands to the north and are thus an important regional resource. Yang assembled and led a group of younger scientists in the arduous high-elevation (~4000 m and higher) conditions. Together they built and worked at China’s first cold region hydrological station. Yang continued to lead annual field teams to the station until her retirement in 1996.
As a founding member of the Lanzhou Institute, Yang played an important role in shaping glacier research in China. She published three books and 70 papers over her nearly 40 year career (Reference YangYang, 1982;Reference Yang, Lui, Zeng and ChenYang and others, 2000; Reference Yang and ZengYang and Zeng, 2001). In her first book, Glacier water resources in China, Reference YangYang (1991) compiled and analyzed the prior 30years’ work on glacier hydrology in China. Written in response to a request from the National Department of Hydrology and Power, the book was the first comprehensive survey of its kind, and Yang won the National Science and Technology Progress Second Award in recognition of the accomplishment. Today she cites this as her most satisfying research project (personal communication from Yang Zhenniang, 2010). Yang also served as the Lanzhou people’s representative, member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), and member of the CPPCC Standing Committee in the Gansu provincial government. Writing in 2003, Shi Yafeng cited Yang’s dedication to research, innovative spirit and ability to overcome any challenge that stood in her way as an example for future generations (Reference ShiShi, 2003).
2.3.9. Lai Zuming
Lai Zuming (b. 1937) grew up in DeYang, Sichuan Province, China. Lai’s family encouraged her academic interests and preparation for university entrance exams. In 1956 she matriculated at Chengdu University of Technology to study land hydrology. Graduating in 1960, she was assigned to work with the new Lanzhou glacier research group. Lai specialized in glacier hydrology, at first with an emphasis on flood prediction on the north slope of the Tien Shan and the Orumqi river (Fig. 5). During the Cultural Revolution, Lai was assigned to desalination research, for which she used mathematical models to study optimization of reverse osmosis methods. She also collaborated with Yang and Wu on debris flow studies during this time.
The importance of glacier meltwater to arid region hydrology was a founding interest at the Lanzhou Institute, and when Lai returned to glaciology after the Cultural Revolution her work emphasized the effect of climate change in meltwater production. In the early 1980s she led the Tien Shan component of the first Chinese glacier inventory project, during which more than 3000 glaciers were cataloged. Her work in later years would build upon this foundation. Lai was among the first researchers at the Lanzhou Institute to incorporate computational modeling into their work, using hydrologic models to evaluate meltwater production under changing climate conditions (Reference LaiLai, 1987; Reference Lai and YeLai and Ye, 1991).
2.3.10. Wu Xiaoling
Growing up in Beijing, Wu Xiaoling (b. 1934) followed the same track as most city girls, completing the full 12 years of primary and secondary school before taking the university placement exam. In 1954, she was assigned to study geology at Moscow State University. Completing her studies in 1959, Wu was assigned to work at the Beijing Geological Institute, where she participated in power station and railroad design projects. She was transferred to the Lanzhou Institute in 1965 to begin new projects with Professor Shi Yafeng. The Cultural Revolution began soon thereafter and Wu joined the debris flow research group that formed at Lanzhou.
Wu returned to glacier research after the Cultural Revolution. Initially, her work followed a long-standing interest at the Lanzhou Institute, water resources. Wu joined the institute’s Qilian Shan research in the early 1980s, using hydrogen isotopes to investigate groundwater recharge by snowmelt in the Lenglongling district of the Qilian Shan (Reference Wu, Hdvermann and WangWu, 2007). Wu pioneered ice-core studies on Chinese glaciers, assembling a research group at Lanzhou for that purpose. Fieldwork began on the Dunde ice cap in 1984, and the first boreholes reached bedrock in 1986 (Reference Thompson, Wu, Mosley-Thompson and XieThompson and others, 1988;Reference Wu and ThompsonWu and Thompson, 1988). These were the first glacier boreholes drilled to bedrock in China.
2.3.11. Almut Iken
Almut Iken (b. 1933) began her secondary school studies as her divided homeland began to rebuild itself in the aftermath of World War II. As German scientists started to reconstruct their research programs, West German society was reconstructing itself as well. Political and social leaders rejected the biological essentialism of the Third Reich, but in promoting women’s right to equal status in society the emphasis was ‘equality in difference’, that is, a woman’s right was to a private domestic sphere, free from interference by the state (Reference Aldrich, Kass-Simon and FarnesHöhn, 1993;Reference MoellerMoeller, 1998). The underlying view of women’s role in society thus changed little and, as before the war, there was scant room for women in the new German scientific enterprise. Indeed, the rate of women earning PhDs in mathematics and the natural sciences was larger in the 1920s than at any time since (Reference CostasCostas, 2002).
Almut Iken’s interest in physics grew as she progressed through secondary school and this motivated her toward science and math courses, and toward preparation for the teaching licensure exam. As elsewhere, teaching was recommended to German women who sought professional work outside the home (along with social work and other ‘helping’ occupations). Upon passing the exam, Iken began what she expected to be a career teaching. Vacations spent hiking in the Alps, Norway and Swedish Lappland sparked an interest in glaciers, and Iken set her sights on visiting the polar regions.
After 7 years teaching secondary school and observing glaciers while on holiday, Iken wrote a letter to Professor Richard Goldthwait at The Ohio State University, asking how she might find a 2 year job working in the Arctic or Antarctic. She received in reply an application form for a field assistantship in Antarctica. Unfortunately, Goldthwait was unfamiliar with German names and had assumed that Almut was male. Antarctic fieldwork was at that time, 1967, out of reach for women. Goldthwait forwarded her letter to Professor Colin Bull, an advocate for women in field science. Bull replied with detailed advice about how Iken could best prepare herself for glacier field studies. She followed his suggestion and enrolled in a training course in northern Sweden, where she learned surveying and stream observation methods. With the appropriate training on her resume, Iken applied for work with field programs at McGill University in Montreal and the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. Professor Fritz Muller at McGill replied first and Iken prepared to join the Jacobson-McGill research program on Axel Heiberg Island in the Canadian Arctic. Her plan was to return after 2 years to her teaching position in Germany.
Iken’s project on Axel Heiberg Island included resurveys of velocity markers and ablation measurements on White Glacier. Professor Muller suggested a period of short-term surveys, at intervals of a few hours. Iken carried out the surveys and found considerable variation in glacier velocity on a range of timescales, including a diurnal variation that appeared to be related to variations in stream discharge. The observations set Iken thinking about water pressure at the glacier base and pathways for water through the glacier system. Working with materials at hand on the island, she constructed an electrical resistance meter using two electrodes, a cable, and plastic hose as a protective casing for the instrument. She lowered the tube into a moulin, it soon became stuck and she started planning a better scheme for the following season (Reference IkenIken, 1972). Clearly, Iken was destined to become a glaciologist.
Returning to Montreal in the fall, Iken discovered that both doctoral students and field assistants earned the same wage. With Muller’s endorsement, she abandoned the plan to return to secondary school teaching and entered the graduate program at McGill. She devoted her energy to studying the glaciological literature and preparing for a doctoral thesis on velocity variations on White Glacier, a theme through which she would go on to make fundamental contributions to science. The student salary was small, but the reward of frugal living was the opportunity to work in the Arctic and to study with McGill professors Muller, John Elson and John Jonas, all of whom encouraged her to pursue both her field and theoretical interests in glaciology. When Muller moved to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich, he invited a group of students to join him, Iken among them. She completed her PhD at ETH (Reference IkenIken, 1974) and took up a research position of her own.
Over the following decades, Iken expanded her field program to investigate glacier sliding and ice deformation in many settings and developed mathematical models of these processes. Her work was both innovative and influential (Reference IkenIken, 1981;Reference Iken and BindschadlerIken and Bindschadler, 1986; Fig. 6). Her work in Greenland (Fig. 7) fundamentally changed the understanding of Arctic glaciers, including the discovery of a thick layer of temperate ice at depth and the recognition that deformation within that layer was primarily responsible for the fast flow of the glacier (Reference Iken, Echelmeyer, Harrison and FunkIken and others, 1993;Reference Funk, Echelmeyer and IkenFunk and others, 1994; Reference Luthi, Funk, Iken, Gogineni and TrufferLuthi and others, 2002).
Reflecting on her career as a glaciologist, Iken emphasizes the importance of early opportunities to participate in fieldwork. Prior to Axel Heiberg Island, Iken worked at the Arctic Institute of North America’s Kluane Lake station in the Yukon, among a diverse group of scientists and students. One day, Walter Wood, a founding member of the institute, asked Iken if she wouldn’t mind interrupting her (hutpainting) project to go for a reconnaissance flight with him. Flying over the surging Steele Glacier and other glaciers in the St Elias Range, she saw for the first time alpine glaciation writ large. Later that season, she was invited to join George Rigsby and Sam Collins on a surveying trip to Fox (now Rusty) Glacier as part of a project established in anticipation of a surge. She practiced her surveying skills, discussed trigonometry, learned the proper method for cooking dry spaghetti and marveled at the wilderness around her:
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One night, when I stepped out of my tent and looked to the shining, white mountains around, thinking about the happy life I experienced, I wondered whether all this was real – or just a dream.
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(personal communication from A. Iken, 2010)
2.3.12. Elizabeth M. Morris
Like many others profiled here, Elizabeth Morris (b. 1946; Fig. 8) grew up in an environment where education was valued and a university education was expected. At school, she performed well in the humanities and the sciences, but her parents, both teachers of English, encouraged Morris to prepare for university studies in the sciences. This advice was a good fit for an academically minded girl with an interest in glaciated landscapes, first sparked by a televised movie about the Matterhorn. Arriving at the University of Bristol to study physics, Morris discovered that contrary to her parents’ sensibility, it was possible to pursue both academic studies and sport, and the seed of her career in glaciology began to grow.
Elizabeth Morris completed her BSc in Physics at Bristol and continued on under the supervision of John Nye, completing her PhD, ‘The sliding of ice over rock and other substances’, in 1972. Fewer than 5% of the student cohort were women at that time. Following her interest in glacial environments, she applied immediately for a post with BAS and was turned down, application unread. The rationale was simple: BAS facilities were of ‘expeditionary type’ and thus unsuited to women. Applying for a post at SPRI, Morris received a similar response: there was no job for which she could be considered because all involved fieldwork in the Antarctic. Undeterred from her interest in polar glaciology, Morris moved to the University of East Anglia, where her theoretical and experimental work on regelation under realistic conditions (Reference MorrisMorris, 1976) found a good fit with Geoffrey Boulton’s interest in subglacial till processes.
Recognizing the cultural challenges to her progress in field-based glaciology, Morris developed strategies to work around the obstacles. Taking a post at the Institute of Hydrology (IH, now the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology), a research center parallel to BAS in its institutional structure, she brought snow studies to the institute and worked her way up the ranks with the support of the institute’s founder, Jim McCulloch (Reference Morris and WoolhiserMorris and Woolhiser, 1980;Reference MorrisMorris, 1981; Reference Morris and ThomasMorris and Thomas, 1985). When Charles Swithinbank retired as Head of the Earth Sciences Division at BAS, Morris, by then at the appropriate rank and recently put forward for a merit promotion, applied for the open position. She was hired in 1986 and in 1987 became the first woman to join a BAS field team, working with Julian Paren and Jean- Louis Tison on the George VI Ice Shelf.
In the years since her move to BAS, Morris has led field parties in both the Antarctic and Arctic, investigating the physics of snow and the mass balance of polar ice masses (Reference MorrisMorris, 1999;Reference Hawley, Morris and McConnellHawley and others, 2008). While Morris’s enthusiasm for polar travel and the element of the unknown inherent to field science is unrivaled, her theoretical contributions to glaciology are considerable, and indeed the combination of the two is the hallmark of her work (Reference Morris and CooperMorris and Cooper, 2003;Reference Hawley and MorrisHawley and Morris, 2006; Reference MorrisMorris, 2008). She was awarded the Polar Medal in 2003 for her contributions to science in the UK.
Throughout her career, Elizabeth Morris has maintained the careful focus on research about which Kathleen Lonsdale wrote in 1971. She began her postdoctoral work at a time when open misogyny was falling out of fashion and administrators understood the political importance of hiring female graduates (Reference HammondHammond, 1992). She nevertheless faced considerable prejudice, both institutional and personal, but like Moira Dunbar was able to put it aside and continue on toward where she wanted to go. Reflecting on her progress through the ranks and on her female colleagues who did not make it so far, Morris is candid:
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There were an awful lot of women around who were trying to do the same thing I was trying to do. You could be shot down at any time but, by chance, I wasn’t. I wasn’t shot down as I rushed out of the trenches.
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(personal communication from E.M. Morris, 2010)
2.3.13. Kumiko Goto-Azuma
When the young Kumiko Goto (b. 1958) attended a public lecture on ice crystals given by Professor Akira Higashi, 15 out of every 100 university students in Japan were women (Reference OgawaOgawa, 2006). Two or three of those 15 would have been studying science, most likely biology or chemistry. The place to find women on campus was in humanities departments (where about 60% of majors were women) and education and health departments (about 50% and 35% respectively). Indeed, as a high-school student, Goto was counseled by a teacher, ‘there is no way that a woman can be a professional scientist. You should choose pharmacy so that you can sell medicine at a drug store even after you get married’ (personal communication from K. Goto-Azuma, 2010). This was common advice at the time and, like the other women discussed here, Goto struck out on a nearly uncharted path when she decided to turn her childhood love of snow into a scientific career.
Inspired by Professor Higashi’s lecture, Kumiko Goto applied to study in the Department of Applied Physics at Hokkaido, where his research team was using X-ray diffraction and other techniques to study ice crystal structure and deformation (Reference Hondoh, Itoh, Amakai, Goto and HigashiHondoh and others, 1983;Reference Goto, Hondoh and HigashiGoto and others, 1986). Goto completed her undergraduate degree in 1981 and continued on for MS and PhD work, despite having been again advised that women should not consider careers as research scientists. She completed her PhD on lattice defects in 1986, married fellow glaciologist Nobu- hiko Azuma and began the first of two postdoctoral appointments with Professor Chester Langway at the State University of New York (SUNY) in Buffalo that year. The introduction to snow and ice-core studies at SUNY Buffalo prepared Goto-Azuma to make the most of her first opportunity for fieldwork when it finally arrived.
Goto-Azuma returned to Japan in 1990 and found a postdoctoral position in Professor Masayoshi Nakawo’s laboratory at the Institute of Snow and Ice Studies in Nagaoka, where her husband was a member of the faculty at the University of Technology. Goto-Azuma credits Professor Nakawo, who had been supportive of her interests and goals when she was a student, with providing the opportunity to continue in glaciology despite an institutional culture that did not readily accept female scientists.
Two years later, Goto-Azuma realized her long-standing ambition to include fieldwork in her glaciological research, when Shuhei Takahashi invited her to join a field team he was organizing for Shun Kobayashi. The project was as part of Professor Okiitusgu Watanabe’s Arctic research program, and her appointment to this post must have come as a surprise to Professor Watanabe, who was not accustomed to thinking of women as scientists. Perhaps Goto-Azuma’s work on ice chemistry in northwestern Spitsbergen (Reference Goto-Azuma, Enomoto, Takahashi, Kobayashi, Kameda and WatanabeGoto-Azuma and others, 1993, Reference Goto-Azuma1995) influenced his thinking;she reflects that in later years Professor Watanabe became an important supporter of women at the National Institute of Polar Research (personal communication from K. Goto-Azuma, 2010). With Svalbard as a stepping stone, she went on to work with Roy (Fritz) Koerner in the Canadian Arctic, a partnership that allowed Goto-Azuma to hone her field skills and prepare to lead her own research programs. In 1998, she was appointed Associate Professor at the Japanese National Institute of Polar Research and, as of this writing, has participated in or led 17 field campaigns in the Arctic, Antarctic and China.
When Kumiko Goto-Azuma began her university studies, women with scholarly interests were directed toward junior colleges or into fields thought suitable for a group whose primary function in society was to become a wife and mother. While women now make up about 25% of all science majors at Japanese universities, their proportions within the disciplines have changed very little (Reference OgawaOgawa, 2006). Yet Goto- Azuma made wise use of every opportunity she found, was able to set aside the harassment and lack of respect that greeted her intrusion into what was understood by its inhabitants to be a male domain, and was willing to wait out the long cycle of postdoctoral and temporary positions common for female scientists in Japan (Reference NormileNormile, 2006). She benefited from the support of a husband who expected her to continue with her research after marriage, and from the mentorship of individuals who did not share the prejudices of their contemporaries. Today, she is one of the 11 women out of every 100 scientists in the Japanese workforce.
2.3.14. Legacy of the Soviet ICY
Participants in the late 19th-century Russian ‘Nihilist’ movement viewed the natural sciences as the ultimate source of truth and progress, and thus important to their socio-political goals (Reference VucinichVucinich, 1970, p. 14). Their enthusiasm found a ready opportunity in Tsar Alexander Il’s late 1850s investment in training (male) scientists as rapidly as possible. The influx of young Nihilists into science classrooms created a welcoming environment for women, although, as elsewhere, the first women admitted to Russian universities were limited to auditor status (Reference KoblitzKoblitz, 1988). Barred from the university when Alexander II put down student demonstrations in 1861, Russian women traveled to western Europe, primarily to Switzerland, where foreign students could be admitted to university without an entrance exam (Reference KoblitzKoblitz, 1988). This was an important circumstance for women who did not have access to formal preparatory training at home. The Russians were pioneers of women’s education in Europe, but the opportunity came at a price, especially in Switzerland where Russian women faced discrimination in public and harassment by non-Russian men in the classroom (Reference KoblitzKoblitz, 1988). Nevertheless, hundreds of women persevered, motivated by both their desire to learn and their progressive social philosophy.
Russian women at home organized a series of campaigns intended to win university education for themselves (Reference EngelEngel, 2000, p. 60-61). The eventual result was the founding, in 1878, of the Bestuzhev Higher Women’s Courses, named for the first director, Professor K.N. Bestuzhev-Ryumin. Enrollment was restricted, women received no state support to attend and teachers often volunteered their time. Course offerings began to be restricted in 1886, were abolished in 1889 and then resurrected in 1906. The Higher Courses transitioned into the Third Petrograd University in 1918, and that organization was, in turn, merged with others to form the Petrograd State University in 1919. From that time on, although their fortunes followed trends in national politics, women maintained their access to university education with support from the state (Reference VucinichVucinich, 1970).
Many new opportunities became available in Soviet snow and ice research during the IGY (1957-58) and the International Hydrological Decade that followed (196574) (Reference BulkeleyBulkeley, 2008). Women participated in all aspects of IGY planning, operations and data analysis. Two women, V.A. Troitskaya and N.P. Ben’kova, were members of the national IGY committee, more than a dozen others led major IGY projects, and many more appear as lead authors of IGY-era papers. This was possible because well-trained women were ready to take on the challenge.
A number of remote research stations, established or improved during the IGY, served as hubs for research activities conducted in the field and in the laboratory. Women were well represented in these efforts, although in Antarctica, as was typical at the time, women did not go ashore. University of Leningrad lecturers Nina Konkina and E.S. Lebedeva, together with V.N. Koleshnikova from the University of Moscow, helped establish the high-altitude IGY Fedchenko glacier stations in the Pamir mountains, Tajikistan (Reference Kazanskiy and KolesnikovaKazanskiy and Kolesnikova, 1961;Reference KolesnikovaKolesnikova, 1962;Reference KonkinaKonkina, 1967). Elizabeth S. Troshkina, V.A. Voloshina and others participated in the Moscow State University field program at Elbrus mountain in the western Caucasus. Glaciological studies on Elbrus included glacier mass balance, ice mechanics and glacier hydrology (Reference BlinovaBlinova, 1961;Reference Troshkina and MachovaTroshkina and Machova, 1961;Reference VoloshinaVoloshina, 1961). Irina Markova Lebedeva investigated glaciers in the relatively unexplored Polar Ural Mountains, where the Academy of Sciences Institute of Geography established an IGY station near the headwaters of the Khodata river (Reference DolgushinDolgushin, 1961;Reference LebedevaLebedeva, 1961).
Thirty-one glaciers in the Tien Shan were selected for monitoring and many more were visited during the IGY (Reference ZabirovZabirov, 1961). The alpine Physico-Geographical Station established in 1948 by the Soviet Academy of Sciences and carried forward by the Kirghiz Academy of Sciences after 1955 served as a base for many field studies. M.I. Iveronova studied glaciers, debris flows and avalanche in the Tien Shan (Reference IveronovaIveronova, 1958). This was a continuation of work she began long before the IGY (Reference IveronovaIveronova, 1950).
In contrast to China, where the early generations of female glaciologists have not been replaced over time, Russian women continue to be well represented in glaciology, although they rarely rise to the highest levels of leadership. Paleoglaciologist Olga Solomina, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, is a notable exception in that regard. Many of the women who published their first papers in the IGY era are still active or only recently retired. Unfortunately, attempts to arrange interviews for this paper were unsuccessful.
3. Conclusion
Throughout history, women seeking advanced education and work in the sciences and mathematics have faced challenges in finding appropriate preparatory training, admission to universities and, eventually, employment in their chosen disciplines (Reference RossiterRossiter, 1980). These challenges are amplified by low economic status and racial prejudice. When women’s education is valued, it is often for benefits external to the individuals themselves. Echoing sentiments expressed around the world, the late 19th-century progressive Indian civic leader Dyal Singh Majithia campaigned for girls’ education: ‘the object of female education in this country is not to make sound scholars but to make better mothers, sisters and wives’ (T. Rajagopalan, http://www.hinduonnet.com/2001/10/09/stories/13090178.htm). Such rationales for women’s education persist to the present day, notably with respect to the developing world (Reference ZwartZwart, 1992).
Wherever opportunity arose, due to labor shortages, economic disincentives for men, or legal incentives for universities and employers, women found places on the scientific stage. When the the socio-economic environment changed, women often found themselves back in the wings. This pattern is not unique to the sciences but is found in most employment sectors throughout recorded history (Reference BennettBennett, 2006). Women like Louise Arner Boyd, Hilda Richardson and Elizabeth Morris were able to create leading roles for themselves by rearranging the stage. More commonly, women adapted themselves to fill the space available. The story, as historians of women report, is about change, not transformation.
An effort has been made in the present contribution to look as far back in time as possible with as wide a lens as possible, yet certainly some ‘pioneer’ women in glaciology have been omitted. Women in the Global South are largely missing here, as are groups who only started to gain access to the scientific laboratory late in the 20th century. The proportion of papers authored by women in IGS publications hovered steadily around 5% for the first three decades of the record and is still below 20% (Fig. 9). A metric such as membership in the IGS is less rigorous with respect to scientific accomplishment, introduces an economic bias beyond that associated with obtaining advanced education and is not investigated here.
Many of the successful scientists discussed in the present contribution chose to remain single or without children. As a rule, married women’s scholarly pursuits have throughout history been secondary to the activities of their husbands, but it is important to recognize that within the ‘trailing career’ framework, women actively negotiated for the best possible options. Ebba Hult De Geer’s university education was cut short by marriage, a bargain she made in order to gain a permanent appointment under circumstances in which independent female scholars were not accepted. Kathleen Lonsdale and Jean Grove both balanced career and family life by adapting their research agendas to fit the needs of family and by hiring domestic help. Eleanora Bliss Knopf taught private courses from her husband’s office at Yale when the university denied her official status. Yang Zhenniang and her colleagues reflect that after 1949, Chinese women gained equal opportunity in science but unequal expectations regarding household responsibilities went unchallenged and unchanged. Kathleen Lonsdale wrote in 1971 that the female scientist ‘must be willing to accept additional responsibility’ if she wants to succeed. Imbalanced expectations regarding childcare and other household duties persist to the present day, and while the career tracks of male scientists in dual-career families benefit from married status, women’s careers do not (Reference Fuchs, von Stebut and AllmendingerFuchs and others, 2001;Reference Canizares and ShaywitzCanizares and Shaywitz, 2010).
In some cases, early supporters of equity in science helped create opportunities for women in glaciology. Such support was usually inspired by requests made by the women themselves. In all cases, those opportunities were only meaningful because there were women trained and ready to take them. Reflecting on her interactions with men in positions of relative power, Liz Morris (personal communication, 2010) notes, ‘When I say he was a good boss… he should have been a good boss’. That is, lack of prejudice should be common, not a sign of exceptional character. In all cases, a supportive mentor, female or male, was important to the success of women introduced here.
Glaciology today embraces a highly specialized set of disciplines. To understand women’s participation in glaciology, we must understand women’s access to the fields of study leading toward those specializations, primarily math and the physical sciences. Within the sciences, sex distribution among disciplines varies widely, following patterns set in place when women gained access to the university in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Women are relatively well represented in the life sciences, approaching parity with men in some countries, and scarce in the physical sciences (Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001; European Commission, 2009a; Reference Canizares and ShaywitzCanizares and Shaywitz, 2010).
Today, far more women train for careers in the sciences than obtain them. From the mid-20th century onward, governments have crafted laws to promote equity in education, first in the Soviet bloc and China and then later in the West and beyond. Yet gender parity in the sciences and the broader labor market has nowhere been achieved, and where women have entered the sciences in significant numbers, they have tended to remain in supporting, not leading, positions (Reference Etzkowitz and KemelgorEtzkowitz and Kemelgor, 2001; Reference BlickenstaffBlick-enstaff, 2005; Reference EpsteinEpstein, 2007). Where they exist, exceptions can be explained by strong socio-economic forcings. For example, women occupy about 50% of academic positions in Argentina, where decades of political intervention have resulted in an unstable work environment and low faculty salaries unattractive to men but deemed acceptable for women (Reference PeronaPerona, 2009). Nevertheless, Argentine women are under-represented in the physical sciences and do not rise to senior positions at the same pace as their male colleagues (Reference Vilte and PeralesVilte and Perales, 2007).
The sex biases highlighted by female correspondents to Science a century ago (Reference HayesHayes, 1910;Reference TalbotTalbot, 1910) certainly remain on display today (Reference Andrews, Kornbluth and StokkeAndrews and others, 2010; Reference HerbersHerbers, 2010), but most academic analyses of women’s status in the sciences emphasize more subtle, systemic issues (Reference Etzkowitz and KemelgorEtzkowitz and Kemelgor, 2001;Reference BlickenstaffBlickenstaff, 2005). Women whose ability equals that of their male counterparts are lost at every transition point along what has been called a ‘leaky pipeline’ from secondary school, through university, and into academic and research careers (Reference BlickenstaffBlickenstaff, 2005; European Commission, 2009b). A growing body of literature examines factors that may affect girls’ and women’s progress: for example, bias in curricular materials and pedagogy, the availability of role models, cultural norms for gender-appropriate behavior, and harassment (Reference BlickenstaffBlickenstaff, 2005; European Commission, 2009b). Women in majority ethnicities and with higher economic standing may be concerned primarily with career advancement, while for women in minority ethnic groups or with lower economic status, simply gaining access to higher education may be in the forefront (Reference Ainuddin, Gomes de Carvalho, Fan, Kelar, Munderand and TaebAinuddin and others, 2005).
A growing number of reports issued by governments and research institutes concerned about impending labor shortages in science and engineering emphasize the need to train and retain women (Reference Mendoza and JohnsonMendoza and Johnson, 2000; Reference OgawaOgawa, 2006; European Commission, 2009b). That rationale is not far removed from the ‘good wife, wise mother’ framing of generations past, in that it places value not in women’s intellectual fulfillment but in their service to others, a traditional view of women’s role in society. Historians may in the future reference such reports as evidence of an economic forcing that produced space for women in the scientific labor force of the early 21st century. Such spaces, in decades and centuries past, were transient. In the United States today, concern is raised in the popular media about the negative social effects of women gaining a stronger footing in the workplace and the classroom (C.H. Sommers, http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2000/05/the-war-against-boys/4659/;H. Rosin, http://www.theatlantic.-com/magazine/archive/2010/07/the-end-of-men/8135/). This echoes economic recessions past, when the cure for unemployment among men was to send women back to the home (Reference TournierTournier, 1973;Reference KuwaharaKuwahara, 2001;Reference MonkMonk, 2004; Reference MaddrellMaddrell, 2008;Reference BaldwinBaldwin, 2009).
Biological determinism, a long-standing justification for women’s low participation in or active exclusion from the sciences, has emerged recently in the popular discourse regarding women’s continued under-representation in science. Popularizations of evolutionary psychology and neurobiology suggest men and women possess different ‘ways of knowing’ and that women are ill-adapted on evolutionary grounds for science and the competitive environment of the laboratory (Reference BrizendineBrizendine, 2006; Reference Ceci and WilliamsCeci and Williams, 2006). Both parts of the thesis, women’s ‘inherent’ traits and the ‘male’ culture of the scientific laboratory, should be questioned, as they were in centuries past (Reference WollstonecraftWollstonecraft, 1796;Reference MozansMozans, 1913). Critical analyses of the recent literature discount the notion of sex differences in cognitive ability and instead conclude that women tend not to persist in math-intensive fields, even where they begin along such academic tracks, due to choices that women, but not men, are compelled to make in modern societies (Reference Young and BalabanYoung and Balaban, 2006;Reference Ceci and WilliamsCeci and Williams, 2009). Persistent cultural framing of math and physical sciences as male fields is also found to be important in driving the choices girls and women make regarding education and careers in mathematics and the sciences.
It is tempting to use late 20th-century trends in women’s participation in the sciences to predict future growth or as evidence that equity is at hand. Yet doing so requires us to ignore much of the history of women’s access to education, work in the sciences, and the paid workforce. Careful reading of that history shows that economic and sociopolitical forcings drive access. The same forcings remain at work today (Reference Ceci and WilliamsCeci and Williams, 2009). While progress has recently been made, women remain under-represented in math and the physical sciences, and the social context for that status has not changed, despite hard-won gains of the late 20th century.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Magnús Már Magnússon, Ken Cruikshank and Scott Waibel for assistance with the IGS authors database. We thank Atsumu Ohmura for his assistance with interviews. Gracias to Olga Nasello for helping us learn about Laura Levi and for patience with C.L.H.’s rudimentary Spanish. Thanks to Julie Palais for insight into polar exploration and to Teresia Teaiwa for the Pacific view. C.L.H. is particularly indebted to Dr Ann Little for her assurance during the review process that both history and historiography matter. C.L.H. was supported by US National Science Foundation (NSF) Office of Polar Programs (OPP) grants No. 0838810 and 0538015.