Albertina Carlsson | |
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Born | |
Died | 25 December 1930 |
Nationality | Swedish |
Alma mater | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Zoology |
Albertina Carlsson (12 June 1848 – 1930) was a Swedish zoologist. She is referred to as the first Swedish woman to have performed scientific studies in zoology.[1]
Carlsson was born to tailor A.P. Carlsson and A.M. Jönsson. She married Carl Oscar Nelson and had 5 children. She was given private tuition and educated herself at the Högre lärarinneseminariet in Stockholm, 1865–1868. She was employed as a teacher at the Paulis elementarläroverk för flickor ('Pauli Elementary For Girls') in 1870–81 and at Södermalms högre läroanstalt för flickor ('Södermalm Educational Institute for Girls') in 1881–1907.
From 1880 onward, Carlsson studied zoology at the Zootomycal institute at the Stockholm University. She produced circa 30 larger and smaller scientific work mainly about the area of comparative anatomy, which was published in Swedish, German and British scientific papers. She particularly focused on the systematic position and relation between different species of mammals. In 1884, she shared the award Flormanska priset of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for her German language work Beiträge zur Kentniss der Anatomie der Schwimmvögel (1884). She was made honorary doctor at Stockholm University in 1927.