The Polish-French Physicist Who Won Two Nobel Prizes and Was Killed by Her Own Discovery
Marie Curie won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 and in Chemistry in 1911. She died of aplastic anaemia at 66 in 1934 — a substantial direct consequence of forty years of unprotected exposure to the radium and polonium she had isolated. Her laboratory notebooks remain radioactive and are kept in lead-lined boxes.
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