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Google doodle salutes DNA pioneer Rosalind Franklin

The art on Google's home page celebrates the researcher whose data was crucial to Watson and Crick's discovery of the double-helix structure of DNA
Google doodles a science heroine
Google doodles a science heroine

Who discovered the DNA double helix? The obvious answer is Nobel prizewinners Watson and Crick. The fellow scientists who aided them have all too frequently been forgotten – but not by Google, which today boasts a home-page doodle marking what would have been the 93rd birthday of British biophysicist and crystallographer Rosalind Franklin.

The Google doodle includes Franklin’s face in the second ‘O’ and the DNA double helix in the ‘L’. The ‘E’ is a depiction of Photo 51 – the X-ray diffraction image that was instrumental in allowing Watson and Crick to crack DNA’s structure.

Franklin died aged 37 from ovarian cancer, four years before Watson, Crick and fellow researcher Maurice Wilkins won the . Her death made her ineligible to share the prize.

Unfortunately for Franklin, her role in the groundbreaking discovery in 1953 was mostly overlooked. that “the data which really helped us to obtain the structure was mainly obtained by Rosalind Franklin”.

At least the Google doodle is one small way of ensuring Rosalind Franklin can now get the recognition she deserves.

Topics: DNA / women in science