In college, Marie tried lots of different subjects. Her father always told her, “When you find your life’s work, make sure it is something you can do, and most important, something you like to do.” She took classes in art, and music, and math, and teaching, and geology. She couldn’t quite make up her mind.
Then one day, her geology teacher pointed to a big map of the earth. Almost three-fourths of it was plain blue ocean. What was under all that water? Was it flat, like a beach? Or were there mountains and valleys, as on land? No one knew. That got Marie’s attention. All that blue blank space—waiting to be mapped.
Exploring with Numbers
Marie became a geologist. She got a job with a group studying the oceans. But Marie wasn’t allowed to go to sea. The Navy did not let women on ships. Marie’s job was to stay in the office and do math and draw. But that didn’t mean she couldn’t explore.
Part of Marie’s job was to keep track of all the data that the ships sent back. One number she often wrote down was the depth of the water. Ships measured this with sonar—sending out a sound ping and timing the echo. Often they made many measurements each day. In the old days, sailors lowered a weight on a string until it hit bottom, then measured the string.
Esta historia es de la edición October 2019 de Ask Magazine for Kids.
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Esta historia es de la edición October 2019 de Ask Magazine for Kids.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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When a Whale Falls
When an enormous whale dies, its body sinks to the bottom of the ocean. There it provides food for thousands of deep-sea creatures.
The Deepest Dive
In 1872, two scientists set out to study the ocean.
Marie Maps The Sea
Young Marie Tharp thought her dad had the best job ever. He traveled around the country, making maps. His maps were special—they revealed hidden things. They showed where different kinds of soil were, and wet and dry places. That helped farmers know what to plant.
Internet Ocean
Say you’re curious about giraffes.
Bigger Than The Rules
How one tall kid changed the way we play basketball.
Eat This Spoon
Imagine you’re at a picnic, enjoying some spicy noodles and fruit salad. For dessert, you have a slice of cake. Then you top off your meal by eating your fork.
In the Hot Shop
The hot shop at Chicago’s Ignite Glass Studio sizzles with activity.
The Glass Ocean
Peering out from its case in the museum, the little brown octopus looks ready to uncurl its tentacles and glide away. But this octopus isn’t going anywhere. It’s made of glass.
Living Glass
What would you do if your skeleton were made of glass? Maybe you’d be a sponge.
The Greedy Glass
How many pennies can you add to a completely full glass of water?