Jane M. Oppenheimer

Jane M. Oppenheimer
Born September 19, 1911
Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.
Died March 19, 1996 (aged 84)
Citizenship American
Fields Embryology and History of Science
Institutions Bryn Mawr College (1938-1980)
Alma mater Bryn Mawr College (A.B. 1932) Yale University (Ph.D 1935)
Doctoral advisor John Spangler Nicholas

Jane Marion Oppenheimer (1911–1996) was an American embryologist and historian of science.

Early life, interests, and education

Oppenheimer was born in Philadelphia, the only child of James H. Oppenheimer and Sylvia Stern. Her father, a physician, encouraged physical activity: sports at school and a personalized exercise regimen at home. She was tutored in French and piano, and developed a love of classical music, fine food, and travel.[1] Oppenheimer’s interests in art were eclectic. The collection she donated to Bryn Mawr includes jade, ivory, and bronze objects, landscape watercolors, and etchings by Pablo Picasso, Jacques Villon, Auguste Rodin, and Leonard Baskin.[2]

Oppenheimer graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1932 and earned a Ph.D in zoology from Yale University in 1935. She met John Spangler Nicholas as an undergraduate attending summer classes at the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory. She later studied under Nicholas at Yale, where she was also influenced by Ross Granville Harrison. Oppenheimer used Nicholas's method of dechlorinating embryos of the killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus, which allowed her to perform precise manipulations of teleost embryos.[3]

Teaching

In 1937, Oppenheimer served as a Research Fellow at Rochester University. In 1938, "Miss Op" joined the faculty of Bryn Mawr as a biologist.[4] Beginning in the early 1940s, Oppenheimer and geology professor Dorothy Wyckoff began teaching courses on the history of science. In the 1970s, Oppenheimer was instrumental in developing a cooperative graduate program in the history of science involving Bryn Mawr, the University of Pennsylvania, and the American Philosophical Society; the program lapsed after her retirement.[5]

Oppenheimer retired in 1980 as the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Biology and History of Science, but returned to Bryn Mawr as a visiting professor from 1983-1984.[6] She also taught at the New School for Social Research, Johns Hopkins, the University of Paris, Hadassah Medical School, and Northwestern University as a visiting professor.[7]

Embryology

Oppenheimer's experimental career grew from her graduate work with Fundulus heteroclitus, and she made significant contributions to teleost embryology. She was particularly interested in questions of inductions, differentiation capabilities, and regulation. Seven early papers were based upon grafting experiments and demonstrated that the dorsal lips of fish and amphibian embryos showed the same organizer activity. Oppenheimer also performed fate mapping experiments, described cell movements of gastrulation, and published a staging series for Fundulus embryos.[8]

Oppenheimer designed one of the four American experiments performed in the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission. The experiment analyzed the effects of weightlessness on Fundulus embryos at different stages of development.[9]

History of science

Oppenheimer's work in the field included Essays in the History of Embryology and Biology (1967), which focused largely on the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but ventured as far back as the sixteenth.[10] She also wrote biographical studies of Karl E. von Baer, Curt Herbst, and Ross Harrison. Her areas of particular interest included the relationship of embryological data to evolutionary theory and early physiological and surgical discoveries.[11]

Editing

As editor or member of the editorial board, Oppenheimer was involved with American Zoologist, Biological Abstracts, Excerpta Medica, Journal of Morphology, Journal of the History of Biology, and Quarterly Review of Biology.[12]

Awards and honors

Oppenheimer was awarded the Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal (Yale Graduate Alumni Association), Otto H. Hafner Award (American Association of the History of Medicine and the Medical Library Association), Kosmos Achievement Award (U.S.S.R.), Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, NASA Group Achievement Award, Karl Ernst von Baer Medal (Estonian Academy of Sciences), and an honorary doctorate from Brown University. She won Fellowships from the Guggenheim (twice), National Science Foundation, and Rockefeller Foundation.[13]

Oppenheimer belonged to many scholarly societies, including the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Society of Zoologists, the American Association of Anatomists, the American Society of Naturalists, the International Society for Developmental Biology, the American Society for Developmental Biology, the American Association of the History of Medicine, the History of Science Society, the International Academy of the History of Sciences, the International Society for the History of Medicine, the International Academy of the History of Medicine (Paris), and the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.[14]

Footnotes

  1. Margaret Hollyday, "Oppenheimer, Jane Marion," Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century, Vol. 5, Susan Ware, ed. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2004), Google Books (accessed 13 February 2015), 487.
  2. Carol W. Campbell, "Professor Emeritus Jane M. Oppenheimer's Legacy Features in the Lois and Reginald Collier Science Library," Mirabile Dictu: The Bryn Mawr College Library Newsletter No. 1, May 1997, http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/mirabile/mirabile1/oppenheimer.html (accessed 13 February 2015).
  3. Margaret Hollyday, "Jane Marion Oppenheimer, 1911-1996," Society for Developmental Biology website, http://www.sdbonline.org/sites/archive/SDBMembership/Oppenheimer.html (accessed 13 February 2015).
  4. Kimberly A. Buettner, "Jane Marion Oppenheimer," The Embryo Project Encyclopedia, http://embryo.asu.edu/pages/jane-marion-oppenheimer (accessed 13 February 2015).
  5. Joy Harvey and Marilyn Ogilvie, "Oppenheimer, Jane Marion (1911-1996)," The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: Pioneering Lives from Ancient Times to the Mid-20th Century, Marilyn Ogilvie, Joy Harvey, and Margaret Rossiter, eds. (Routledge, 2003), Google Books (accessed 14 February 2015), 963-964.
  6. Buettner.
  7. Mary Patterson McPherson, "Jane Marion Oppenheimer (19 September 1911-19 March 1996)," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Vol. 142, No. 2 (June 1998), http://www.jstor.org/stable/3152306 (accessed 10 February 2015), 290.
  8. Hollyday, SDB; McPherson, 289-90.
  9. Hollyday, SDB; McPherson, 290; Wolfgang Saxon, "Jane Oppenheimer Dies at 84; Expert on Embryos and Space," New York Times, March 23, 1996, http://www.nytimes.com/1996/03/23/us/jane-oppenheimer-dies-at-84-expert-on-embryos-and-space.html (accessed 13 February 2015).
  10. Bernard Towers, Review of Essays in the History of Embryology and Biology, Medical History Vol. 13, No. 4 (1969), http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1033989/ (accessed 13 February 2015), 396.
  11. McPherson, 290.
  12. McPherson, 290-1.
  13. McPherson, 289-90.
  14. McPherson, 291.