Australian Biologist awarded Nobel Prize




Nobel Prize winner
©Elisabeth Fall
ELIZABETH BLACKBURN has become the first Australian woman to win the coveted Nobel Prize award. The Australian science community is celebrating along with the recipient. There have been 10 previous Australian recipients - 9 for Science and Medicine plus 1 for Literature – Patrick White.

Professor Blackburn, whose research is conducted at the University of California San Francisco,  shares the award with Carol W. Greider, from John Hopkins University and Jack W. Szostak from Harvard Medical School. The award in the field of physiology or medicine was given for the discovery of telomerase, an enzyme that plays a key role in normal cell function, as well as in cell aging and most cancers. The research leading to this award has been carried out over a period of more than 25 years when Professor Blackburn first made the discovery.

Elizabeth Blackburn was born in Hobart and studied at Melbourne University High School. An inquiring mind, mentored by her chemistry teacher and inspired by reading the life of Marie Curie, Professor Blackburn has shown the Science Lab can indeed be a “woman’s place”.

Find out more from the following links and News articles:
The announcement of the award was made by video from the Nobel Institute
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One Response to “Australian Biologist awarded Nobel Prize”

  1.   judij Says:

    This is extraordinary historical and scientific news, yet did not receive a mention on local ABC News last night, nor the national 7.30 Report. Just shows how hard it is still is for women, even the successor of Marie Curie. Hang in there girls. Awards of the highest honour are possible – just not reportable.

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