Other Features:
Smyth Sewn. Custom Designed Laid Paper.
100% recycled binder boards
Decorative printed cover paper
FSC-certified text paper
Threaded stitching and glue, as needed
Acid-free sustainable forest paper
Original Art: Marie Skłodowska Curie’s handwritten notes measuring radium and thorium
Era: 1920s : Region: Paris, France
More about Marie Curie-
"Born in Warsaw, she began her scientific training at the underground Flying University before following her older sister Bronisława to Paris in 1891, where she earned advanced degrees and began her groundbreaking research. It was here that Curie’s work took off, including developing the theory of and coining the term “radioactivity,” isolating radioactive isotopes and discovering two elements, radium and polonium, the latter of which she named for her home country.
It was Marie’s custom to write down all her observations and personal notes in the lab she and her husband kept. Thanks to these “notebooks of discovery” we have direct insight into the powerful minds conducting such important work into radium purification and measurement. It is a page from one such notebook, in which she wrote on the “science of radioactivity,” that we have reproduced for this journal cover. The document contains Curie’s handwritten calculations precisely measuring the radium and thorium (also called ionium) content of different minerals. It dates from the 1920s, after her husband’s tragic death in an automobile accident, when her lab was specializing in not only studying, but also producing, radioactive sources.
Thanks to Marie Curie’s pioneering work, the world could not ignore the radioactivity of radium. Seemingly contradicting the principle of energy conservation, this discovery forced a reconsideration of the foundation of physics, allowing scientists and medical professionals to harness radioactivity for the greater good. Not only was it instrumental in bringing X-rays into the field in World War I, it offered a means by which cancer could successfully be attacked.
Curie’s legacy is not limited to scientific achievements but covers societal groundbreaking as well. As a woman in the scientific community, she had to overcome additional hurdles and prejudices to earn her respect and position, and to this day she remains the only woman to be awarded two Nobel Prizes. Despite these achievements, she was known to be a modest and generous woman, giving away most of her prize money. She even refused to patent her radium-isolating process in order that the scientific community could continue to develop her principles unhindered.
Marie became director of the Curie Laboratory of the Radium Institute in 1914 and remained in her position until her death at age 66. The work was not without its dangers, of course. Both Pierre and Marie Curie experienced radium burns and were exposed to extensive doses of radiation. If Pierre had not been killed in an accident earlier in life, he likely would have died of exposure-related illness along with Marie.
The Curie Institutes she founded in Paris and Warsaw remain major centres of medical research. Today the Curies’ notebooks are kept in special lead boxes and are too radioactive to touch without protective lead clothing. We are grateful to the Musée Curie for partnering with us to bring this unique handwritten sample of Marie Curie’s thought process to the Paperblanks collection."