5 Scientists Too Smart for Their Time
SciShow・2 minutes read
Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift, facing rejection until the 1960s when plate tectonics was accepted. Rosalind Franklin's x-ray crystallography led to the discovery of DNA's double helix, but her contributions were overshadowed by Watson and Crick.
Insights
- Alfred Wegener faced significant resistance and ridicule from the scientific community for his theory of continental drift, which was not widely accepted until the 1960s when plate tectonics became recognized.
- Rosalind Franklin, despite her crucial work in discovering the double helical structure of DNA through x-ray crystallography, was overshadowed by James Watson and Francis Crick, who used her data without permission to announce their findings.
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Recent questions
Who proposed the theory of continental drift?
Alfred Wegener
What did Rosalind Franklin contribute to DNA discovery?
Double helical structure
What did Henrietta Swan Leavitt discover in astronomy?
Leavitt's Law
What did James Clerk Maxwell unify in physics?
Electricity and magnetism
Who is considered the first computer programmer?
Ada Lovelace
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