INGE LEHMANN: DANISH SEISMOLOGIST ROCKS
GOOGLE´S EARTH.
Danish seismologist, who was born on 13
May 1888, discovered the existence of the Earth’s inner core
Google’s latest doodle celebrates the
birthday of Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann, who discovered the existence of
an inner core in the Earth.
Coming 127 years after her birth, the
doodle shows the Earth split in two with the inner core shining in the centre.
Lehmann, who died aged 104 in 1993,
studied earthquakes to find that the Earth had both an inner and outer core, a
revelation which redefined how the planet was studied.
“Inge used deduction and evidence to
discover something unseeable. Today’s doodle sheds light on her powerful but
invisible discovery. Doodler Kevin Laughlin helps us experience the gift Inge
illuminated for the world by revealing it as a glowing orb. Not all of his
early drafts looked the same, but the Earth’s inner core glowed at the centre
of each,” commentary from Google on the artwork said.
Lehmann was educated at a mixed gender
school – unusual for the time – and became frustrated in her career at the
attitudes towards women in the sciences.
Her nephew Niles Groes has described how
she had a filing system in which cardboard cards with information about earthquakes
around the world were organised into porridge boxes.
“With her cardboard cards and her
oatmeal boxes, Inge registered the velocity of propagation of the earthquakes
to all parts of the globe. By means of this information, she deduced new theories
of the inner parts of the Earth,” he said.
She was given the highest honour of the
American Geophysical Union, the William Bowie medal, in 1971.
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