Science
Technology
Engineering
Art
Math
100

She won the Nobel Prize in 1903 for her work in radioactivity. She also has an element named after her. 

a. Jane Goodall

b. Marie Curie

c. Vera Rubin

d. Rosalind Franklin

e. Inge Lehmann

b. Marie Curie

100

She is considered the world's first computer programmer.

a. Annie Easley

b. Grace Hopper

c. Ada Lovelace

d. Mary Keller

e. Mary Wilkes

c. Ada Lovelace

100

She is best known for her contribution to the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. She was also the first person to walk across it.

a. Emily Roebling

b. Hedy Lamarr

c. Stephanie Kwolek

d. Mary Anderson

e. Martha Coston

a. Emily Roebling

100

She is one of the head artists in American Modernism, and one of the first to produce purely abstract works of art.

a. Louise Bourgeois 

b. Frida Kahlo

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

d. Georgia O'Keefe

e. Mary Cassatt

d. Georgia O'Keefe

100

She made major contributions to the fields of theoretical physics and abstract algebra. Albert Einstein dubbed her as “the most significant mathematical genius thus far produced since the higher education of women began.” 

a. Hypatia

b. Sophie Germain

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya

d. Dorothy Vaughn

e. Emmy Noether

e. Emmy Noether

200

She is the most famous primate scientist in history, most renown for her work with chimpanzees.

a. Jane Goodall

b. Marie Curie

c. Vera Rubin

d. Rosalind Franklin

e. Inge Lehmann

a. Jane Goodall

200

She was a US Navy Admiral who was one of the programmers on the Harvard Mark I computer. She also created COBOL, a programming language still in use today.

a. Annie Easley

b. Grace Hopper

c. Ada Lovelace

d. Mary Keller

e. Mary Wilkes

b. Grace Hopper

200

She discovered Kevlar; she also has 17 patents to her name.

a. Emily Roebling

b. Hedy Lamarr

c. Stephanie Kwolek

d. Mary Anderson

e. Martha Coston

c. Stephanie Kwolek

200

She is known for her uncompromising self portraits. She divorced fellow artist Diego Rivera.

a. Louise Bourgeois 

b. Frida Kahlo

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

d. Georgia O'Keefe

e. Mary Cassatt

b. Frida Kahlo

200

She is considered the first female mathematicians and is known for helping develop the astrolabe. She most known for her work on conic sections (circle, ellipse, parabola, hyperbola).

a. Hypatia

b. Sophie Germain

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya

d. Dorothy Vaughn

e. Emmy Noether

a. Hypatia

300

Using X-ray crystallography, she discovered the shape of DNA- the double helix.

a. Jane Goodall

b. Marie Curie

c. Vera Rubin

d. Rosalind Franklin

e. Inge Lehmann

d. Rosalind Franklin

300

She designed and wrote the software system, as well as the operating system, of the world's first personal computer called LINC.

a. Annie Easley

b. Grace Hopper

c. Ada Lovelace

d. Mary Keller

e. Mary Wilkes

e. Mary Wilkes

300

She invented windshield wipers.

a. Emily Roebling

b. Hedy Lamarr

c. Stephanie Kwolek

d. Mary Anderson

e. Martha Coston

d. Mary Anderson

300

She was Marie Antionette's portrait painter and painted nearly 1000 works in both portraits and landscapes.

a. Louise Bourgeois 

b. Frida Kahlo

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

d. Georgia O'Keefe

e. Mary Cassatt

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

300

She is the first woman to be honored by the Paris Academy of Sciences for her work on elastic theory. She also contributed to Fermat's Last Theorem.

a. Hypatia

b. Sophie Germain

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya

d. Dorothy Vaughn

e. Emmy Noether

b. Sophie Germain

400

She discovered the composition of the Earth's core using data from earthquakes.

a. Jane Goodall

b. Marie Curie

c. Vera Rubin

d. Rosalind Franklin

e. Inge Lehmann

e. Inge Lehmann

400

She worked on the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and developed code that is used in batteries in hybrid cars.

a. Annie Easley

b. Grace Hopper

c. Ada Lovelace

d. Mary Keller

e. Mary Wilkes

a. Annie Easley

400

She invented the signal flare, which is still used by the US Navy today.

a. Emily Roebling

b. Hedy Lamarr

c. Stephanie Kwolek

d. Mary Anderson

e. Martha Coston

e. Martha Coston

400

She is famous for doing portraits of women in everyday life, especially mothers with their children.

a. Louise Bourgeois 

b. Frida Kahlo

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

d. Georgia O'Keefe

e. Mary Cassatt

e. Mary Cassatt

400

She was a "human supercomputer" for NASA that helped send John Glenn into orbit in 1962.

a. Hypatia

b. Sophie Germain

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya

d. Dorothy Vaughn

e. Emmy Noether

d. Dorothy Vaughn

500

She was an American researcher who proved the existence of dark matter.

a. Jane Goodall

b. Marie Curie

c. Vera Rubin

d. Rosalind Franklin

e. Inge Lehmann

c. Vera Rubin

500

She started the National Science Foundation workshop in the computer science department at Dartmouth, which was at the time an all-male school.

a. Annie Easley

b. Grace Hopper

c. Ada Lovelace

d. Mary Keller

e. Mary Wilkes

d. Mary Keller

500

She was an actress who invented a remote-controlled communications system for the US military with a basis of frequency hopping.

a. Emily Roebling

b. Hedy Lamarr

c. Stephanie Kwolek

d. Mary Anderson

e. Martha Coston

b. Hedy Lamarr

500

She is most famous for her gigantic spider sculptures.

a. Louise Bourgeois 

b. Frida Kahlo

c. Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

d. Georgia O'Keefe

e. Mary Cassatt

a. Louise Bourgeois

500

She was instrumental in understanding the workings of Saturn and its rings with her studies in differential equations and elliptical integrals.

a. Hypatia

b. Sophie Germain

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya

d. Dorothy Vaughn

e. Emmy Noether

c. Sofia Kovalevskaya