Eleanor Carothers holding one of her specimen cases
Born
(1882-12-04)4 December 1882
Newton, Kansas
Died
1957
Nationality
American
Alma mater
Nickerson Normal College, University of Kansas, Pennsylvania State University
Scientific career
Fields
zoology, geneticist, cytologist
Institutions
Pennsylvania State University, University of Iowa, University of Pennsylvania
Estrella Eleanor Carothers (4 December 1882 – 1957) was an American zoologist, geneticist, and cytologist known for her work with grasshoppers. She discovered important physical evidence for the concept of independent assortment, vital to modern understanding of genetics.
She began her career as a Pepper Fellow at Pennsylvania State University, where she stayed from 1913 to 1914. That year, she was appointed an assistant professor of zoology there, and graduated with her Ph.D. in 1916. Carothers stayed on as assistant professor until 1936, though she also had an overlapping appointment as an independent investigator for the Marine Biological Laboratory, which lasted from 1920 until 1941. In 1936 she moved to the University of Iowa and was a research associate there until 1941. Her work there was funded by the Rockefeller Foundation.[2]
While studying and teaching at the University of Pennsylvania, Carothers traveled to the southern and southwestern regions of the United States on research expeditions, held in 1915 and 1919. During her time at the University of Iowa, she completed her most important work, in the field of genetics and cytology, using grasshopper embryos to study the independent assortment of heteromorphic homologous chromosomes.[2] This was the first physical evidence that homologous chromosomes separated independently during meiosis, which is one source of genetic variation in sexually-reproducing organisms.[3]
Later life
Carothers retired from the University of Iowa in 1941 and moved from Iowa to Kingman, Kansas, where she continued to conduct research for the Woods Hole Marine Biological Lab. In 1954, she moved to Murdock, Kansas, where she lived and researched for the remainder of her life. Carothers died in 1957 at the age of 75.[2][4]
Shearer, Barbara; Shearer, Benjamin (1996). Notable women in the life sciences : a biographical dictionary (1. publ. ed.). Westport, Conn. [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. ISBN9780313293023. OCLC832549823.
Wayne, Tiffany K. (2011). American women of science since 1900. Santa Barbara: ABC-CILO. ISBN9781598841596. OCLC702118874.
References
^Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey (1986). Women in Science: Antiquity through the Nineteenth Century. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. pp. 52–53. ISBN0-262-15031-X.
^ abcdeChadwell, Faye A. (1996). Benjamin F. Shearer; Barbara Shearer (eds.). E. (Estella) Eleanor Carothers. Greenwood Press. pp. 56–57. ISBN978-0-313-29302-3. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)