File:Matilda Moldenhauer Brooks (b. 1890).jpg

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Description: Botanist Matilda Moldenhauer (b. 1890) was completing graduate work at Harvard University (Ph.D., 1920) when she met biologist Sumner Cushing Brooks. During their marriage, Matilda and Sumner conducted joint research projects and coauthored such works as The Permeability of Living Cells. From 1920-1927, she worked for the U.S. Public Health Service and, after that, was on the research staff of the University of California. During the 1930s, she discovered an antidote for carbon monoxide and cyanide poisoning.

Creator/Photographer: Julian Scott

Medium: Black and white photographic print

Date: Prior to 1927

Persistent URL: [1]

Repository: Smithsonian Institution Archives

Collection: Science Service Records, 1902-1965 (Record Unit 7091) - Science Service, now the Society for Science & the Public, was a news organization founded in 1921 to promote the dissemination of scientific and technical information. Although initially intended as a news service, Science Service produced an extensive array of news features, radio programs, motion pictures, phonograph records, and demonstration kits and it also engaged in various educational, translation, and research activities.

Accession number: SIA2007-0392
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Matilda Moldenhauer Brooks (b. 1890)

Author Smithsonian Institution from United States
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18 March 2009

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current01:59, 28 July 2009Thumbnail for version as of 01:59, 28 July 20091,758 × 2,853 (968 KB)File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske) {{Information |Description= '''Description''': Botanist Matilda Moldenhauer (b. 1890) was completing graduate work at Harvard University (Ph.D., 1920) when she met biologist Sumner Cushing Brooks. During their marriage, Matilda and Sumner conducted join
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