Where did we come from; how are we made; and how will it all end?
These fundamental questions are being tackled by the 2009 L’Oréal Australia For Women in Science Fellows who received their Fellowship from Mark Tucker, CEO of L’Oréal Australia, at a ceremony at L’Oréal’s Australian head office in Melbourne on Tuesday 25 August. The Fellows are:- Tamara Davis, University of Queensland, Brisbane/University of Copenhagen
- Marnie Blewitt, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne
- Zenobia Jacobs, University of Wollongong
Tamara Davis – On the hunt for dark energy
Tamara Davis, University of Queensland / University of Copenhagen (Photo credit: timothyburgess.net)
Zenobia Jacobs – How did we get here? Dating our movement out of Africa one grain of sand at a time
Zenobia Jacobs uses single grains of sand to accurately date the first signs of human society: engineering, art and communities. Last week Science reported on her dating of the first engineers. They were using fire to harden stone axes 75,000 years ago. Each grain of sand contains a ‘clock’ that records how long the grain has been buried in the ground. Zenobia has perfected a technique for reading this clock accurately up to 500,000 years ago. Now, with her L’Oréal Fellowship she will turn to the vexed question: when did humans first settle Australia? [go to Zenobia's full profile and you tube video]Marnie Blewitt – It takes more than genes to make a human
The Human Genome program revealed that it takes 30,000 genes to make a human. But that’s not the full story. Marnie Blewitt wants to know more, “How does a cell know which of its 30,000 or so genes should be active and which should be dormant?” she asks. “How does the keratin gene get turned on in hair follicle cells but not in the cells of the eye?” Marnie, a researcher at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne is using the X chromosome as a tool to pry open the secrets of epigenetics-how our genes get turned on and off. The Fellowship will contribute to a lab assistant and childcare. Marnie is expecting her first child in September. [go to Marnie's full profile and you tube video] To see the full stories and photos click on the following links:- Tamara Davis, University of Queensland, Brisbane/University of Copenhagen
- Marnie Blewitt, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne
- Zenobia Jacobs, University of Wollongong






