Health & Fitness

My Hero: Elizabeth Blackburn

Kristen Sparrow • July 25, 2013

For those of us who revere and are in awe of great scientists, this article is a fun depiction of them having to draw their discoveries.  Goofy and endearing.
Some of the Nobel laureates scrawled scientific formulas on the poster-sized paper. Françoise Barré-Sinoussi, Nobel Prize winner for physiology or medicine in 2008, drew the human immunodeficiency virus, looking somewhat like a Ferris wheel, to depict her and her colleagues’ discovery of the pathogen responsible for AIDS. And, Elizabeth Blackburn, the 2009 winner in the same category, depicted her discovery of how chromosomes are protected by telomeres and the enzyme telomerase in a series of doodles, connected by arrows and brought to life with exclamation points, happy and sad faces and sound effects.

Read more: http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/artscience/2013/07/nobel-prize-winners-are-put-to-the-task-of-drawing-their-discoveries/#ixzz2a4rx4G1d
Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter