PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Higgs, Bettie Matheson TI - Understanding the Earth: the contribution of Marie Tharp AID - 10.1144/SP506-2019-248 DP - 2020 Oct 12 TA - Geological Society, London, Special Publications PG - SP506-2019-248 VI - 506 4099 - http://sp.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2020/10/12/SP506-2019-248.short 4100 - http://sp.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2020/10/12/SP506-2019-248.full SO - Geological Society, London, Special Publications2020 Oct 12; 506 AB - Marie Tharp worked all her life as a geoscientist, and for the most part for the recognition and benefit of her male colleagues. She was employed to assist researchers at Columbia University. Her male colleagues readily used her ingenuity and insights without giving her recognition. Marie tolerated this at first but eventually began to ask for recognition for her own work. Her most influential work was the production of physiographical maps of the ocean floor. During this work, in the 1950s, Marie was the first scientist to realize that there was a large rift running the length of the Atlantic Ocean, and she eventually demonstrated that this rift linked to the East African Rift Valley. Her male colleagues suppressed this discovery for reasons of their own, and 4 years later presented it as their own research. The work caused some key figures in the history of plate tectonics to change the direction of their research. Marie suffered in her career due to rivalries between her male colleagues. It was not until the 1990s that Marie began to be recognized nationally and internationally, and receive awards for her work.