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Citation by Colleen Hansel
I am honored to introduce Gabriela Farfan as the 2024 Doris M. Curtis Outstanding Woman in Science awardee. Gabriela is a brilliant mineralogist and geochemist, who explores the biogenic and abiogenic processes involved in the formation and dissolution of minerals. Gabriela received her PhD in the WHOI-MIT Joint Program, where she explored the role of climate change and anthropogenic stressors on coral biominerals. Gabriela conducted novel mineralogical and chemical characterization of juvenile and adult corals, spanning shallow tropical reefs to the temperate deep-sea communities. To characterize these biominerals that spanned a range of crystallinities and compositions, she utilized sophisticated microscopic and spectroscopic techniques, including X-ray Diffraction Rietveld refinements, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and coupled synchrotron based micro-fluorescence and micro-spectroscopy. Her work provided essential insight into the controls on coral skeletal aragonite structure and composition, including changes in crystallinity as a function of saturation state. Now as a research geologist and group leader at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Gabriela continues to make important advances in environmental mineralogy and biomineralization spanning a wide diversity of organisms, processes, and environments. In addition to being a productive and accomplished researcher, Gabriela is a devoted mentor and educator, creative and engaging spokesperson for geological research and exploration, and role model for women and underrepresented groups in the sciences. Please join me in congratulating Gabriela on this well-deserved recognition!
Response by Gabriela Aylin Farfan
It is an immense honor to be named a Doris M. Curtis Outstanding Woman in Science and to be joining the ranks of the amazing scientists that have received this award. Thank you very much to the Geological Society of America and the selection committee for this distinction.
I owe my career as a geologist and mineralogist to the incredible mentorship that I have received over the past twenty years from my role models, advisors, and peers, including Huifang Xu, Wendy Mao, Cara Santelli, Richard Slaughter, Jeffrey Post, Gordon Brown, Barbara Dutrow, and my colleagues at the Smithsonian NMNH Department of Mineral Sciences. I would especially like to thank my brilliant Ph.D. advisor, Colleen Hansel, for her coaching and continued support over the years. Finally, thank you to my parents, Carlos and Abigail, my friends, and natural history museums, for sparking and nurturing my love of science.