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Also: Philippines: People: By occupation: Scientists: Women scientists This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Filipino scientists . It includes scientists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent.
Luz Oliveros-Belardo was director of the Natural Sciences Research Center at the Philippine Women's University.She became Dean of the College of Pharmacy in 1947. [4] Her research focused on extracting essential oils and other chemicals from native Philippine plants for pharmaceuticals, food production, scents, and other applications. [2]
In October of 2021, the U.S. Embassy in the Philippines partnered with the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA) to present two webinars featuring female NASA scientists, of which Santiago-Bond was one. [16] In the first webinar held on October 4, she described the experiences of women scientists, astronauts, and engineers in space. [16]
In 1980, del Mundo was declared as a National Scientist of the Philippines, [26] the first Filipino woman to be so named. Among the international honors bestowed on del Mundo was the Elizabeth Blackwell Award for Outstanding Service to Mankind, handed in 1966 by Hobart and William Smith Colleges , [ 27 ] and the citation as Outstanding ...
She joined the Ateneo de Manila faculty in 1965, [3] eight years before the school began accepting women as students. [4] She chose academia over a competing job offer from industry because at the time it paid slightly better. [3] She acquired the nickname "Mustang Mary" at this time, because of the Ford Mustang that she drove. [5]
This is a non-diffusing parent category of Category:21st-century Filipino women scientists The contents of that subcategory can also be found within this category, or in diffusing subcategories of it.
Carmen Camacho Velasquez (August 7, 1913 – October 16, 1994) was a Filipino parasitologist.She specialized in parasites of the tropical fish of the Philippines. She is known for her work on the taxonomy of Digenea and was the first to describe the parasitic nematode Capillaria philippinensis, which causes intestinal capillariasis in humans.
Nata de coco was originally invented in 1949 by Teodula K. Kalaw as an alternative to the traditional Filipino nata de piña which is made from pineapples. Macapuno was first cultivated commercially in the Philippines after the development of the "embryo rescue" in vitro culture technology in the 1960s by Emerita V. De Guzman.