Home Recent News Recent News Learn all about our exciting discoveries in astronomy and astrophysics, which extend across the scope of the cosmos, from exoplanets to the earliest stars and galaxies. Hot Off the Presses Search search Search Clear All Research Area Astronomy & Astrophysics Earth Science Global Ecology Genetics & Developmental Biology Matter at Extreme States Planetary Science Plant Science Type Organizational News Awards Feature Story First-person Narrative Press Release Q&A Event Highlights Spotlight Trustee News Campus News Alumni Profiles Yearbook Division Biosphere Sciences & Engineering Embryology Global Ecology Plant Biology Carnegie Administration Earth & Planets Laboratory Observatories Sort by Date Ascending Date Descending Filter By: Clear All Type Organizational News Awards Feature Story First-person Narrative Press Release Q&A Event Highlights Spotlight Trustee News Campus News Alumni Profiles Yearbook Research Area Astronomy & Astrophysics Earth Science Global Ecology Genetics & Developmental Biology Matter at Extreme States Planetary Science Plant Science Division Biosphere Sciences & Engineering Embryology Global Ecology Plant Biology Carnegie Administration Earth & Planets Laboratory Observatories Sort by Date Ascending Date Descending Filter results 101 results found for: March 21, 2024 Feature Story Carnegie Science's jewel in the Southern Hemisphere: Las Campanas Observatory March 20, 2024 Feature Story A founder’s passion set the stage for 120 years of breakthroughs March 08, 2024 Feature Story The Women "Computers" of Mount Wilson Observatory Nettie Marie Stevens is shown here looking through a microscope while studying at the Stazione Zoologica in Naples, Italy, in 1909. In 1904, soon after getting her Ph.D. in biology, Stevens was awarded a grant from Carnegie Science. Her 1905 paper “Studies in Spermatogenesis with Especial Reference to the Accessory Chromosome” produced some of the first work offering cytological evidence demonstrating that the X and Y chromosomes were associated with sex determination. Image Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Special Collections. March 01, 2024 Feature Story Nettie Stevens Biography February 28, 2024 Feature Story Carnegie celebrates the legacy of Black astronauts February 09, 2024 Feature Story JWST is Alan Dressler’s dream come true February 08, 2024 Feature Story Anne Pommier brings a new spark to Carnegie’s long-standing legacy of researching planetary interiors February 08, 2024 Feature Story Interview: Nina Fedoroff on Barbara McClintock December 26, 2023 Feature Story Hot springs, hot science December 22, 2023 Feature Story Carnegie Science year end celebrations Pagination Previous page chevron_left … Page 2 Current page 3 Page 4 … Next page chevron_right
March 21, 2024 Feature Story Carnegie Science's jewel in the Southern Hemisphere: Las Campanas Observatory
Nettie Marie Stevens is shown here looking through a microscope while studying at the Stazione Zoologica in Naples, Italy, in 1909. In 1904, soon after getting her Ph.D. in biology, Stevens was awarded a grant from Carnegie Science. Her 1905 paper “Studies in Spermatogenesis with Especial Reference to the Accessory Chromosome” produced some of the first work offering cytological evidence demonstrating that the X and Y chromosomes were associated with sex determination. Image Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Special Collections. March 01, 2024 Feature Story Nettie Stevens Biography
February 08, 2024 Feature Story Anne Pommier brings a new spark to Carnegie’s long-standing legacy of researching planetary interiors