- Physicist and campaigner for women in science
- She moved to Canada in 1949 after surviving the Holocaust. She joined the University of Toronto's department of metallurgy and materials science in 1967. She was a specialist in the structure of metals and alloys. She pioneered the development of archaeometry, which applies techniques of materials analysis to archaeology.
- She discovered radioactive strontium-90 in Canadian children's baby teeth. Her research helped to change opinion about nuclear weapons testing during the Cold War.
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