Wanita dalam geologi adalah berkenaan dengan sejarah dan sumbangan wanita dalam bidang geologi. Meskipun terdapat sejarah panjang wanita dalam bidang ini, namun mereka cenderung kurang diwakili. Sepanjang era sebelum abad kelapan belas, bidang sains dan sains geologi belum diformalkan seperti abab berikutnya. Oleh itu ahli geologi awal lebih dikenali sebagai pemerhati dan pengumpul tidak formal tidak mengira mereka lelaki atau perempuan. Antara contoh yang jelas pada masa tersebut termasuk Hildegard of Bingen yang menulis karya mengenai batu dan Barbara Uthmann yang menyelia operasi perlombongan selepas kematian suaminya. Puan Uthmann juga merupakan saudara kepada Georg Agricola . Sebagai tambahan kepada nama-nama ini ramai wanita bangsawan juga mempunyai koleksi saintifik batuan atau mineral. [1]
Pada abad kesembilan belas telah muncul kelas ahli geologi profesional baru yang melibatkan wanita. Sepanjang tempoh ini negara British lebih cenderung mempunyai lebih ramai wanita penting yang menyumbang kepada geologi. [2]
Pada tahun 1977 Persatuan Geosains Wanita telah ditubuhkan. [3]
1642: Martine Bertereau, wanita pertama yang direkodkan sebagai pakar mineral yang telah dipenjarakan di Perancis kerana disyaki mengamalkan ilmu sihir.[4]
1824: Emma Hart Willard menerbitkan Ancient Geography sebagai bahan sokongan kepada Woodbridge's System of Universal Geography.[5]
1833: Mary Austin Holley dikenali kerana ketekunan dan penerbitan berkaitan tanah-tanih, sumber air, mineral dan pergunungan di sekitar Texas.[6]
1841: Orra White Hitchcock, Sarah Hall, dan Mrs. Brooks merupakan antara wanita pertama yang mengilustrasikan penerbitan geologi.[7]
1865: Elizabeth Carne telah dipilih sebagai wanita pertama sebagai Felo di Royal Geological Society of Cornwall.[8]
1866: Kerja survei dan laporan yang dibuat Puan. Myers, Kate Andrews, dan Harriet Huntsman's di Illinois, Ohio, dan Kansas masing -masing.[7]
1889: Mary Emilie Holmes menjadi wanita pertama Felo Geological Society of America.[9]
1893: Florence Bascom menjadi wanita kedua yang memperolehi Doktor Falsafah (Ph.D) dalam geologi dari Amerika Syarikat dan wanita pertama menerima Doktor Falsafah (Ph.D) dari Johns Hopkins University.[10][11] Beliau dikenali sebagai " ahli geologi wanita pertama di Amerika."[12]
1901: Florence Bascom menjadi ahli geologi wanita pertama yang membentangkan kertas didalam Geological Survey of Washington.[15]
1909: Alice Wilson merupakan ahli geologi wanita pertama yang diupah oleh Geological Survey of Canada.[16][17] Beliau sering kali dkenali sebagai ahli geologi wanita pertama di Kanada.[18]
1919: Wanita buat pertama kalinya dibenarkan menjadi felo di Geological Society of London.[19][20]
1924: Florence Bascom became the first woman elected to the Council of the Geological Society of America.[15]
1936: Inge Lehmann discovered that the Earth has a solid inner core distinct from its molten outer core.[21]
1938: Alice Wilson became the first woman appointed as Fellow to the Royal Society of Canada.[18]
1942: American geologist Marguerite Williams became the first African-American woman to receive a PhD in geology in the United States. She completed her doctorate, entitled A History of Erosion in the Anacostia Drainage Basin, at Catholic University.[22][23]
1943: Eileen Guppy was promoted to the rank of assistant geologist, therefore becoming the first female geology graduate appointed to the scientific staff of the British Geological Survey.[24]
1963: Elsa G. Vilmundardóttir completed her studies at Stockholm University and became the first female Icelandic geologist.[29]
1966: Eileen Guppy became the first female staff member of the British Geological Survey to be awarded an MBE.[30]
1967: Sue Arnold became the first female British Geological Survey person to go to sea on a research vessel.[24]
1969: Beris Cox became the first female paleontologist in the British Geological Survey.[24]
1971: Audrey Jackson became the first female field geologist in the British Geological Survey.[24]
1975: Female officers of the British Geological Survey no longer had to resign upon getting married.[24]
1977: The Association for Women Geoscientists was founded.[3]
1980: Geochemist Katsuko Saruhashi became the first woman elected to the Science Council of Japan.[31]
1982: Janet Watson became the first woman president of the Geological Society of London.[32]
1983: Geologist Sudipta Sengupta (and marine biologist Aditi Pant) became one of the first two Indian women to join an Antarctic expedition.[33]
1991: Doris Malkin Curtis became the first woman president of the Geological Society of America.[34]
1991: Indian geologist Sudipta Sengupta became the first woman scientist to receive the Shanti Swaroop Bhatnagar Award in the Earth Sciences category.[35][36]
1995: Karst in China: its Geomorphology and Environment by Marjorie Sweeting was published; it was the first comprehensive Western account of China's karst.[37][38]
1995: Jane Plant became the first female Deputy Director of the British Geological Survey.[24]
2010: Marcia McNutt became the first female director of the United States Geological Survey.[39]
2014: Maureen Raymo became the first woman to be awarded the Wollaston Medal, the highest award of the Geological Society of London.[40][41]
^Willard, Emma, 1787-1870. (1852). Ancient geography : as connected with chronology and preparatory to the study of ancient history. W.J. Hamersley. OCLC8028952.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Holley, Mary Austin, 1784-1846. (2005). Texas : observations, historical, geographical and descriptive : in a series of letters, written during a visit to Austin's colony, with a view to a permanent settlement in that country, in the Autumn of 1831. Brown University Women Writers Project. OCLC176859903.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^ abWomen of science : righting the record. Kass-Simon, G. (Gabriele), Farnes, Patricia, 1931-1985., Nash, Deborah. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 1990. ISBN0253332648. OCLC19130838.CS1 maint: others (link)
^Plant, J. A.; Hackett, D.; Taylor, B. J. (1994). "The role of women in the British Geological Survey". Geology Today. 10 (4): 151–156. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2451.1994.tb00893.x.