Rosalind  Franklin 
She was born on July 25, 1920 in Notting Hill, London, England. He studied chemistry at Cambridge and learned crystallography and X-ray diffraction, techniques that he applied to DNA fibers. One of her photographs provided key information about the structure of DNA. Other scientists used it as evidence to back up their DNA model and took credit for the discovery. Franklin died of ovarian cancer in 1958, at age 37.
Some say that the recognition of her contribution was stolen by two scientists: James Watson and Francis Crick. They did not give recognition for the work to Franklin, who died in 1958, at age 39, without being recognized by the scientific community.
Rosalind Franklin is the scientist to whom we owe everything we know about DNA. For me she was the most important woman in the history of modern chemistry. Her contributions to science involve the study of the structures of carbon, graphite, DNA, RNA, and viruses.
I admire her because despite the time in which she lived, where the woman was not considered, even so her love for science did not stop her, and her discovery was very important, since she basically discovered everything that we are. despite the fact that her recognition for her research

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