My grandma flatted with Beatrice Tinsley at university! Apparently she woke up every morning at like 5am, cooked breakfast, and then started studying. So definitely hard-working as well as a genius.
Thank you for this wonderful story about Beatrice Tinsley. I had the good fortune to meet her at a Symposium she gave at Haverford College in early 1981. I attended with Sarah Lippincott, the Director of Sproul Observatory at nearby Swarthmore College. It seemed just a few weeks later that Sarah told me of Beatrice's death. I remember clearly my shock and sadness. Something about Beatrice touched me and I contribute to the Beatrice Tinsley Prize awarded by the A.A.S. Just 18 months later I traveled through Christchurch on the way to the Antarctic; I didn't realize then the connection Beatrice had with Christchurch.
Christine Cole Catley, and her husband Doug Catley (after whom I was named), were very close friends of my parents. When I was a kid, we'd sometimes go and stay with them at Cape Catley in what was then a very remote part of the Marlborough Sounds. So remote that all the houses (none of which could be seen from any of the others) were all on a party line. One of the last in the country. The Catleys were very interesting and awesome people! :) I'm pretty sure my mum has a signed copy of Bright Star.
You made me look up "party line". A shared telephone connection. (So "party" means "group" here.) How nice that you remember these people, thanks for sharing.
@@Jasper_4444 Disappointed the term "party line" doesn't refer to, like, a giant conga line of people between the houses. But that's fine, too, I guess.
Thanks for the interesting video on Beatrice Tinsley. Her name has been mentioned many times in our family. My late father Ian, also a Canterbury graduate, was also a noted NZ astronomer and physicist, and even has a mountain named after him in the same range as Tinsley.
I'm a Gen X woman in Aotearoa NZ who studied science at least through high school and I'm hearing her for the first time. Disappointed she has not been celebrated. Privileged to hear about her now.
Happy to report I found Bright Star at a Devonport second hand bookseller years ago and read about Beatrice then - thanks for making this a little more public - she deserves to be better known!!
An inspiring story about a remarkable woman - incredibly sad how her life was cut so short. Beautiful scenery throughout the video too. A joy to watch.
Fascinating video Tibees! Yes I'm glad to know Tinsley had to leave her family to study, it shows the focused will-power of this field-changing woman. Love the synchronicities you share with her too, very cool.
What a woman and scientist Beatrice Tinsley was. This was wonderful and I was glad to hear that there are plans to make a film from the biography as that thought crossed my mind, too, after hearing about her remarkable life!
Why aren't there more films highlighting lesser known geniuses? People have no need to insert or create ridiculous drama under the veneer of "artistic license". She had enough drama in her interesting life outside of academic excellence. When people say "we need to highlight female voices", we should be learning about REAL, non fictitious women. There are way too many women who have been overlooked due to the historic inequities in "rockstar" academia.
Thanks so much for this! I'm a kiwi scientist from Christchurch who lives on the other side of the world, so this story had a nice connection for me. And tomorrow I'm going back for a visit, and I'll go walking around Tekapo too! You captured the scenery so well!!
Thank you for this. Your presentation is alluring. I planned to just have a quick look and was happily drawn in for the whole ride. What a remarkable and somewhat melancholic story.
Nobody else could have honoured Beatrice as beautifully as you have, Tibees. You do great work and I love your channel so much. I hope you continue and I hope it brings you deep joy.
That's awesome you live in New Zealand Tibees! always thought this was an overseas channel. Calculus lectures at Otago were pretty much incomprehensible when I was there.
Lovely. Vera’s quote can be rephrased in a larger context: There is no telling how much more we might have learned if we had allowed women to participate fully in all human endeavors.
Beatrice Muriel Hill Tinsley (27 January 1941 - 23 March 1981) was a British-born New Zealand astronomer and cosmologist, and the first female professor of astronomy at Yale University, whose research made fundamental contributions to the astronomical understanding of how galaxies evolve, grow and die. (Wiki) Beatrice is not mentioned in writing in this video, so you will not find it if you search for her in youtube. as of june 6 2024.
In 2022, NZ Post issued a series of stamps called "Women in Science." Beatrice features on the $3.80 stamp. The scientists on the other stamps are botanist Lucy Moore ($1.70), paleontologist Joan Wiffen ($3.00) and ethnographer Makereti Papakura ($4.30).
Tinsley is remembered by UC alongside other greats associated with the uni (Rutherford, Popper, Erskine etc) by having a building named after her. What an incredible mind. I’ve almost finished my own PhD at UC, and occasionally look to those figures for inspiration to get to the finish line.
This great woman of science and their struggles are definitely overlooked and the world should talk and teach more about them as role models for the future generations so thank you
Thanks for the interesting story about Beatrice's life and the beautiful footage of Tekapo. It'd be interesting to hear more about the research that you and others did/do at the observatory.
Thank you for introducing me to this remarkable woman. I've wondered where society would be today if woman had been encouraged to participate in the sciences and other disciplines from the early days. How many Beatrices never got to shine at all?
Thank you so much for sharing Beatrice Tinsley's story with us! What an amazing story, very much looking forward to the movie that's gonna be made about her!
What a brilliant video, a fine tribute to a remarkable life. Years, no decades!, ago I knew vaguely of her work but would not have been able to name her. Then a company I worked for rented some factory space in Beatrice Tinsley Cresent and I wondered who it was named for. Looked that up, made the connection and never forgotten. Several years ago I saw a wonderful performance of the 'Bright Star' stage play in Auckland. It was brilliant and portrayed the personal/career challenges she faced, and you shared. I try and get to the annual 'Beatrice Tinsley Memorial Lectures', most recent in May was Lisa Kaltenegger on exoplanet detection, always interesting. Although I guess the reason for melanoma cannot be certain it struck me that she dedicated her life to stars, but it's likely the emissions from our nearest took hers. What a life, and a loss.
Thank you for this video. I’ll confess that I had never heard of her before and it was very interesting to learn a little about her. I hope the movie does go ahead as these are the sorts of people we should be hearing about. That bit about the husband having to eat out now and again really jarred me as well. Even as you said it, it just felt wrong. It was a very different time and I wonder at what we would have become already had things been different in the earlier stages of science and culture.
Awesome Beatrice Tinsley much respect. I too every since I was a small child have looked up to the stars and wondered. I choose Nuclear Physicis as my field of study but my real love is cosmology. I never heard of Ms Tinsley until today, She is my new hero. I will study her thesis papers and ideas and see how I may apply them to my ideas. Thank you for this video and your work. Keep it up! :)
Thank you!! Our little islands in a small corner of the South Pacific have produced some amazing accomplishments. It seems no one has ever told Kiwis that they can't top the world in whatever endeavours they're involved in. So they just go ahead and do it.
Thanks so much alerting me to this amazing person. In the end what a tragic tale and a loss to humanity. I love the symbolism you employed in making her short story, the gradual climb towards the stars - cute! Good luck in your own career! ✨
I am an 85 year old New Zealander and I learned something new today! I have to admit that I had not heard of Beatrice Tinsley previously although i shall temper that admission by also indicating that I have not been involved or interested greatly in astonomy at all during my life. An excellent account of an amazing woman. Thank you.
Thank you for sharing this awesome story of Beatrice. I am one of those kiwis that had never heard about her before, and wish I had. These are the kind of stories that inspired me growing up
Thankyou. Its great to hear about great Kiwis I hope my own daughter is as amazing as you. .. sigjns are she wil be in her own way. .. but no where near as softly spoken.
Excellent video. I grew up in New Plymouth, where Beatrice's father was Mayor in the 1950's. By the time I studied at Canterbury, we already had the Observatory at Mt. John, where I was observing in August 1968 as the world was going crazy (but before the US Air Force arrived at Mt. John ;-) ). I first met Beatrice at a conference in 1972, when she was still in Dallas after finishing her thesis, and already she was a noted speaker. As the first to systematically study how galaxies change with time, her work was directly relevant to the methods then in use by the likes of Sandage and de Vaucouleurs to measure the Hubble Constant and the expected deceleration of universal expansion (we know how that turned out). My last meeting with her was at Caltech circa 1980, when we knew how desperate her situation was, but she gave an outstanding lecture, emphasising the likely importance of galaxy mergers, a new concept then. Her loss in 1981 was tragic. I wrote to a close family friend who happened to be then the Chair of the New Plymouth High Schools Board, and I believe the Board was one of the early contributors to the AAS Beatrice M. Tinsley Prize Fund. She should be remembered well in New Zealand as a great example for young New Zealanders. This video is a worthy contribution to that effort.
thank you for sharing this story, even though it's ultimately a sad one. it really doesn't bear thinking about just how much potential has been wasted throughout history through elevating the interests of one gender over the other.
Thank you for sharing this. I grew up in New Zealand and am proud to have finally learned about Beatrice, but a little annoyed that she is not better known. It seems to me that she should be at least as celebrated as names like Richard Pearse, Edmund Hillary, and Kiri Te Kanawa. I really hope the film get's made and she finally finds her place among the household names in New Zealand.
That is an amazing story. And also, that is an amazing setting. I need that location so I can go hike up that hill under that beautiful sky and that blue ocean. O_O
Wow, I am so happy I clicked on this video. Thank you for introducing me to this amazing woman. I recently went to a free viewing of a documentary during Matariki named Te Whetu Marama which actually means The Bright Star and it was about Hector Busby who opened a school teaching traditional navigation, that school was named Te Whetu Marama. For a small country we have had some amazing people, I wish I had purpose and drive like that.
I had no idea jetlag would end up leading me to an insightful channel! I saw you in the background of scott manley's video of the nasa plasma show-through and i was like OI! That's fucken toby!
Fantastic video. Great to hear about a Kiwi scientist who had this much impact. Frustrating that we all lost 10 years worth of her output, but heartening that she pushed through barriers and had such a rewarding (if brief) career. Nice touch, the quote from Vera Rubin!
I like the way you graciously illuminate forgotten people of distinction. As a humble truck driver, am inspired by people who illuminated my path of breaking the mold. If the glass ceiling is actually does exist, it is simply the gap between one's existence and one aspirations.
I was thinking to myself, oh another one of those long winded going no where stories but I am happy I carried on watching and listening to your amazing story of one of many unknown Kiwi's who made an amazing contribution to the world. Thank you so much will be checking out more on your page.
I had not previously heard of Beatrice Tinsley, thank you for educating me. Equally tragic and inspirational. Thank you also for adding subtitles to your videos.
Great video. Wonderful tribute to an incredible scientist and human. I grew up in Lake Tekapo and on Mt John. My parents are Alan and Pam Gilmore who are retired now but ran the observatory for UC for years. Such a special place.
Your shot of Dallas at 4:13 is the exact spot where Kennedy was shot from the brown building in the middle. That entire location has not changed in 60 years - they preserve it.
Wow. This video came up as a recommendation on TH-cam, and as a kiwi who loves things space and physics I'm disappointed I did not know this story - so thank you for sharing this story and doing it so nicely. Definitely following this channel and looking forward to checking out more of your work!
Dear Toby. THANK YOU for sharing this inspiring and important story of Beatrice - a truly brilliant adopted Kiwi!!! Actually Kiwi's have a rich history of active involvement in astronomy. My great uncle Handel Grigg (of Hastings) discovered comets and has one named after him and, I understand, was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Society for his efforts with a tiny home built telescope extension of his home in Hastings!! I stumbled by accident onto your youtube blog (about Google!!) and the algorithm then took me serendipitously to this blog post!! I have liked and subscribed (& I hope when I am a little bette placed financially to become a patreon)! For now, though, I just loved your post and the views of New Zealand in back drop. As a proud 'Austra-Zealander' (my dad a Kiwi and my mum an Aussie) - I hope to be able to come 'home' from Blighty sooner than later to NZ!!!! May I wish you every success with your own career & I look forward to watching more youtubes from you. Thank You. ❤❤
Thanks Tibees for another trailblazer story, I like history and Biographies about people. and of course kudos to you for the scenic views. what a tough path for Beatrice Hill Tinsley. but she did well for herself and made a difference. Quote "Like wildflowers you must allow yourself to grow in all the places people thought you never would" (Lorde)
I am glad to learn about her. I will be particularly interested to read a paper she coauthored in 1975 called "An accelerating universe" - that's over 20 years before dark energy, even a few years before inflation, and I would like to know if these arguments from 1975 are still valid today. On the topic of the University of Canterbury, I must draw attention to the recent tragic case of Marni Sheppeard. She was a theorist (particle physics, quantum gravity) and had an even more troubled life than Beatrice Tinsley, but she was also way ahead of her time, and her work and her story should be much better known.
My grandma flatted with Beatrice Tinsley at university! Apparently she woke up every morning at like 5am, cooked breakfast, and then started studying. So definitely hard-working as well as a genius.
Do you know how her name was actually pronounced? Was it the 2 syllable Bee-triss as said in this video or the more usual Bee-a-triss?
@@DiscoFangThat's just the kiwi accent.
@@machematixNo it’s not. I’m Kiwi too.
Thank you for this wonderful story about Beatrice Tinsley. I had the good fortune to meet her at a Symposium she gave at Haverford College in early 1981. I attended with Sarah Lippincott, the Director of Sproul Observatory at nearby Swarthmore College. It seemed just a few weeks later that Sarah told me of Beatrice's death. I remember clearly my shock and sadness. Something about Beatrice touched me and I contribute to the Beatrice Tinsley Prize awarded by the A.A.S. Just 18 months later I traveled through Christchurch on the way to the Antarctic; I didn't realize then the connection Beatrice had with Christchurch.
Thank you so much for sharing this. I live near the University of Canterbury, and hearing about the amazing woman makes me very proud to be a Kiwi.
Just astounding. Thx for shinning light on Beatrice and her story. Remarkable.
Thank you very much for paying tribute to this great scientist, who deserves far more recognition.
I don't think I've ever heard of this woman, thank you very much for sharing her story! She definitely deserves to be known.
Christine Cole Catley, and her husband Doug Catley (after whom I was named), were very close friends of my parents. When I was a kid, we'd sometimes go and stay with them at Cape Catley in what was then a very remote part of the Marlborough Sounds. So remote that all the houses (none of which could be seen from any of the others) were all on a party line. One of the last in the country. The Catleys were very interesting and awesome people! :)
I'm pretty sure my mum has a signed copy of Bright Star.
You made me look up "party line". A shared telephone connection. (So "party" means "group" here.) How nice that you remember these people, thanks for sharing.
@@Jasper_4444 Disappointed the term "party line" doesn't refer to, like, a giant conga line of people between the houses. But that's fine, too, I guess.
Very fortunate to have ( signed copy ) the book. Hope they have.
Ah yes! We had a party line in the 1980's so am hoping I'm not ancient!!
Thanks for the interesting video on Beatrice Tinsley. Her name has been mentioned many times in our family. My late father Ian, also a Canterbury graduate, was also a noted NZ astronomer and physicist, and even has a mountain named after him in the same range as Tinsley.
My new aspiration is to get a mountain named after me.
What a bright mind she was. Thank You!
Thanks
Enlightening. Thank you for bringing us this story. just amazing
I'm a Gen X woman in Aotearoa NZ who studied science at least through high school and I'm hearing her for the first time. Disappointed she has not been celebrated. Privileged to hear about her now.
Happy to report I found Bright Star at a Devonport second hand bookseller years ago and read about Beatrice then - thanks for making this a little more public - she deserves to be better known!!
An inspiring story about a remarkable woman - incredibly sad how her life was cut so short.
Beautiful scenery throughout the video too.
A joy to watch.
Fascinating video Tibees! Yes I'm glad to know Tinsley had to leave her family to study, it shows the focused will-power of this field-changing woman. Love the synchronicities you share with her too, very cool.
What a woman and scientist Beatrice Tinsley was. This was wonderful and I was glad to hear that there are plans to make a film from the biography as that thought crossed my mind, too, after hearing about her remarkable life!
Why aren't there more films highlighting lesser known geniuses?
People have no need to insert or create ridiculous drama under the veneer of "artistic license".
She had enough drama in her interesting life outside of academic excellence.
When people say "we need to highlight female voices", we should be learning about REAL, non fictitious women. There are way too many women who have been overlooked due to the historic inequities in "rockstar" academia.
Thanks so much for this!
I'm a kiwi scientist from Christchurch who lives on the other side of the world, so this story had a nice connection for me. And tomorrow I'm going back for a visit, and I'll go walking around Tekapo too! You captured the scenery so well!!
What an outstanding human being… we need more of these people in the world. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for this. Your presentation is alluring. I planned to just have a quick look and was happily drawn in for the whole ride.
What a remarkable and somewhat melancholic story.
Nobody else could have honoured Beatrice as beautifully as you have, Tibees. You do great work and I love your channel so much. I hope you continue and I hope it brings you deep joy.
What a pleasant and clear speaking voice, you have - something that seems less common in younger people, to older people like me!
Another great story. Thank you Toby!
I really enjoy these videos that run like a documentary, very educational and engaging in the content. Thanks for all you do for science.
That's awesome you live in New Zealand Tibees! always thought this was an overseas channel. Calculus lectures at Otago were pretty much incomprehensible when I was there.
Lovely. Vera’s quote can be rephrased in a larger context: There is no telling how much more we might have learned if we had allowed women to participate fully in all human endeavors.
Or just people in general, irrespective of any other arbitrary characteristic. It's depressing to think about.
Yes, so much potential achievement wasted.
Loved the hiking scenes... refreshed me with memories of my youthful jaunts about NZ. Lovely people, Spectacular Land.
This was a lovely reveletion Toby. Thank you.
Thanks!
Beatrice Muriel Hill Tinsley (27 January 1941 - 23 March 1981) was a British-born New Zealand astronomer and cosmologist, and the first female professor of astronomy at Yale University, whose research made fundamental contributions to the astronomical understanding of how galaxies evolve, grow and die. (Wiki) Beatrice is not mentioned in writing in this video, so you will not find it if you search for her in youtube. as of june 6 2024.
UC student here, sitting in the library, just really proud of what you're doing
In 2022, NZ Post issued a series of stamps called "Women in Science." Beatrice features on the $3.80 stamp. The scientists on the other stamps are botanist Lucy Moore ($1.70), paleontologist Joan Wiffen ($3.00) and ethnographer Makereti Papakura ($4.30).
Tinsley is remembered by UC alongside other greats associated with the uni (Rutherford, Popper, Erskine etc) by having a building named after her. What an incredible mind. I’ve almost finished my own PhD at UC, and occasionally look to those figures for inspiration to get to the finish line.
A wonderful story beautifully presented - love the scenery!
This great woman of science and their struggles are definitely overlooked and the world should talk and teach more about them as role models for the future generations so thank you
Thanks for the interesting story about Beatrice's life and the beautiful footage of Tekapo. It'd be interesting to hear more about the research that you and others did/do at the observatory.
Thank you for introducing me to this remarkable woman. I've wondered where society would be today if woman had been encouraged to participate in the sciences and other disciplines from the early days. How many Beatrices never got to shine at all?
Thank you so much for that. I really hope the movie goes ahead!
The way you tell stories makes everything interesting. Keep it up!!!
Thank you so much for sharing Beatrice Tinsley's story with us! What an amazing story, very much looking forward to the movie that's gonna be made about her!
🙏🥰Thx for shinning light on Beatrice and her story. Fascinating video Tibees! 🙏💞💯🤙
What a brilliant video, a fine tribute to a remarkable life. Years, no decades!, ago I knew vaguely of her work but would not have been able to name her. Then a company I worked for rented some factory space in Beatrice Tinsley Cresent and I wondered who it was named for. Looked that up, made the connection and never forgotten. Several years ago I saw a wonderful performance of the 'Bright Star' stage play in Auckland. It was brilliant and portrayed the personal/career challenges she faced, and you shared. I try and get to the annual 'Beatrice Tinsley Memorial Lectures', most recent in May was Lisa Kaltenegger on exoplanet detection, always interesting. Although I guess the reason for melanoma cannot be certain it struck me that she dedicated her life to stars, but it's likely the emissions from our nearest took hers. What a life, and a loss.
Well done, a very professional video. Beautifully shot, beautifully explained. Congratulations and a big thank you.
Thank you for sharing this wonderfully hard working and tenaious Kiwi scientist. It looks like I need to read / research next a about Kilmartin.
Both of you are amazing women! Very inspiring!
You are just wonderful. Thank you for this story.
Thank you for this video. I’ll confess that I had never heard of her before and it was very interesting to learn a little about her. I hope the movie does go ahead as these are the sorts of people we should be hearing about.
That bit about the husband having to eat out now and again really jarred me as well. Even as you said it, it just felt wrong. It was a very different time and I wonder at what we would have become already had things been different in the earlier stages of science and culture.
I feel very, very small.........thank you for sharing her story.
Awesome Beatrice Tinsley much respect. I too every since I was a small child have looked up to the stars and wondered. I choose Nuclear Physicis as my field of study but my real love is cosmology. I never heard of Ms Tinsley until today, She is my new hero. I will study her thesis papers and ideas and see how I may apply them to my ideas.
Thank you for this video and your work. Keep it up! :)
Thank you!! Our little islands in a small corner of the South Pacific have produced some amazing accomplishments. It seems no one has ever told Kiwis that they can't top the world in whatever endeavours they're involved in. So they just go ahead and do it.
Thanks so much alerting me to this amazing person. In the end what a tragic tale and a loss to humanity. I love the symbolism you employed in making her short story, the gradual climb towards the stars - cute!
Good luck in your own career! ✨
Thank you for this, Tibees. A very moving account of a very special person.
🎉🎉 thank you so much for your inspiring and informative video. I absolutely enjoyed it. Love from New Zealand 👍
Just from the photo you can see her energy shining out.
Like you.
Truly amazing.
Thank you for educating us about Beatrice and her work ❤️
Scientists like Beatrice Tinsley are like the stars among us . Very inspiring . Her mind would allow her to overcome all obstacles in her path .
Thank you. One of your very best.
Great video about a scientist I had not heard of. Keep up great content like this
I wasn’t expecting to cry so early this morning. Thank you for continuing to teach in such a lovely and kind manner.
I really appreciate this video. I remember reading about her. Take care of yourself and don’t travel alone. Best wishes
This is wonderful. Thank you!
I am an 85 year old New Zealander and I learned something new today! I have to admit that I had not heard of Beatrice Tinsley previously although i shall temper that admission by also indicating that I have not been involved or interested greatly in astonomy at all during my life. An excellent account of an amazing woman. Thank you.
Thank you for sharing this awesome story of Beatrice. I am one of those kiwis that had never heard about her before, and wish I had. These are the kind of stories that inspired me growing up
Thankyou. Its great to hear about great Kiwis I hope my own daughter is as amazing as you. .. sigjns are she wil be in her own way. .. but no where near as softly spoken.
Excellent video. I grew up in New Plymouth, where Beatrice's father was Mayor in the 1950's. By the time I studied at Canterbury, we already had the Observatory at Mt. John, where I was observing in August 1968 as the world was going crazy (but before the US Air Force arrived at Mt. John ;-) ). I first met Beatrice at a conference in 1972, when she was still in Dallas after finishing her thesis, and already she was a noted speaker. As the first to systematically study how galaxies change with time, her work was directly relevant to the methods then in use by the likes of Sandage and de Vaucouleurs to measure the Hubble Constant and the expected deceleration of universal expansion (we know how that turned out). My last meeting with her was at Caltech circa 1980, when we knew how desperate her situation was, but she gave an outstanding lecture, emphasising the likely importance of galaxy mergers, a new concept then. Her loss in 1981 was tragic. I wrote to a close family friend who happened to be then the Chair of the New Plymouth High Schools Board, and I believe the Board was one of the early contributors to the AAS Beatrice M. Tinsley Prize Fund. She should be remembered well in New Zealand as a great example for young New Zealanders. This video is a worthy contribution to that effort.
Great to see you back in NZ Tibees
thank you for sharing this story, even though it's ultimately a sad one. it really doesn't bear thinking about just how much potential has been wasted throughout history through elevating the interests of one gender over the other.
Thank you for sharing this. I grew up in New Zealand and am proud to have finally learned about Beatrice, but a little annoyed that she is not better known. It seems to me that she should be at least as celebrated as names like Richard Pearse, Edmund Hillary, and Kiri Te Kanawa. I really hope the film get's made and she finally finds her place among the household names in New Zealand.
Wonderful, absolutely wonderful. Thank You.
Even the brightest stars stop shining.
Excellent video.
That is an amazing story.
And also, that is an amazing setting. I need that location so I can go hike up that hill under that beautiful sky and that blue ocean. O_O
Wow, I am so happy I clicked on this video. Thank you for introducing me to this amazing woman. I recently went to a free viewing of a documentary during Matariki named Te Whetu Marama which actually means The Bright Star and it was about Hector Busby who opened a school teaching traditional navigation, that school was named Te Whetu Marama. For a small country we have had some amazing people, I wish I had purpose and drive like that.
I had no idea jetlag would end up leading me to an insightful channel! I saw you in the background of scott manley's video of the nasa plasma show-through and i was like OI! That's fucken toby!
Thank you so much for sharing.
Thank you for telling the story of Beatrice Tinsley's life and successes in such a beautiful way. The Mt John Observatory makes a great backdrop!
Fantastic video. Great to hear about a Kiwi scientist who had this much impact. Frustrating that we all lost 10 years worth of her output, but heartening that she pushed through barriers and had such a rewarding (if brief) career. Nice touch, the quote from Vera Rubin!
Shared to my sisters, thanks for this wonderful portrait.
Wow! Thank you for telling us about Beatrice. I found an old copy of Bright Star and look forward to reading it.
I like the way you graciously illuminate forgotten people of distinction. As a humble truck driver, am inspired by people who illuminated my path of breaking the mold. If the glass ceiling is actually does exist, it is simply the gap between one's existence and one aspirations.
I was thinking to myself, oh another one of those long winded going no where stories but I am happy I carried on watching and listening to your amazing story of one of many unknown Kiwi's who made an amazing contribution to the world. Thank you so much will be checking out more on your page.
I had not previously heard of Beatrice Tinsley, thank you for educating me. Equally tragic and inspirational. Thank you also for adding subtitles to your videos.
I don't really know why but this video made me cry even from the start, thank you for sharing this
Thank you for an excellent video about a talented, exceptional woman. A terrific presentation!
Wonderful life story. Amazing courage. Thank you so much Tibees!
Great video. Wonderful tribute to an incredible scientist and human. I grew up in Lake Tekapo and on Mt John. My parents are Alan and Pam Gilmore who are retired now but ran the observatory for UC for years. Such a special place.
I love what you do. It is so inspiring to me.
Your shot of Dallas at 4:13 is the exact spot where Kennedy was shot from the brown building in the middle. That entire location has not changed in 60 years - they preserve it.
Yeah, noticed that too. Maybe some incorrectly tagged Dallas TX stock footage
12:48 you forgot to mention that one of the main buildings of the University of Canterbury is named after her :)
I live near Beatrice Tinsley cres. and am surprised at the wonderful story & tribute! What a great video Tibees.
What a heartfelt video, thanks for posting.
I so enjoy your gentle and learned presentations
What an inspiring video; thank you so much for making it !!
She was indeed brilliant. Thank you for telling us about her . I hope the movie gets made .
Wow. This video came up as a recommendation on TH-cam, and as a kiwi who loves things space and physics I'm disappointed I did not know this story - so thank you for sharing this story and doing it so nicely.
Definitely following this channel and looking forward to checking out more of your work!
Inspiring. Thank you.
Dear Toby. THANK YOU for sharing this inspiring and important story of Beatrice - a truly brilliant adopted Kiwi!!!
Actually Kiwi's have a rich history of active involvement in astronomy. My great uncle Handel Grigg (of Hastings) discovered comets and has one named after him and, I understand, was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal Society for his efforts with a tiny home built telescope extension of his home in Hastings!!
I stumbled by accident onto your youtube blog (about Google!!) and the algorithm then took me serendipitously to this blog post!!
I have liked and subscribed (& I hope when I am a little bette placed financially to become a patreon)!
For now, though, I just loved your post and the views of New Zealand in back drop.
As a proud 'Austra-Zealander' (my dad a Kiwi and my mum an Aussie) - I hope to be able to come 'home' from Blighty sooner than later to NZ!!!!
May I wish you every success with your own career & I look forward to watching more youtubes from you.
Thank You. ❤❤
Thanks Tibees for another trailblazer story, I like history and Biographies about people. and of course kudos to you for the scenic views. what a tough path for Beatrice Hill Tinsley. but she did well for herself and made a difference. Quote "Like wildflowers you must allow yourself to grow in all the places people thought you never would" (Lorde)
I stood up from my desk and applauded.
I don't often do that.
Thank you for cheering on Beatrice! 😊
Thank you for capturing and sharing such a moving and morally-instructive portrait of Beatrice Tinsley's life and work.
Very inspiring! Thanks for sharing :)
Thank you so much for this story 🙏❤️
I am glad to learn about her. I will be particularly interested to read a paper she coauthored in 1975 called "An accelerating universe" - that's over 20 years before dark energy, even a few years before inflation, and I would like to know if these arguments from 1975 are still valid today.
On the topic of the University of Canterbury, I must draw attention to the recent tragic case of Marni Sheppeard. She was a theorist (particle physics, quantum gravity) and had an even more troubled life than Beatrice Tinsley, but she was also way ahead of her time, and her work and her story should be much better known.