Lego's new play set features its first female scientists. Available in August, the set, "Research Institute," comes with a female astronomer, chemist and paleontologist, as well as pieces to create a ...
Lego is officially launching a series of tiny, plastic female scientists this August, including an astronomer, paleontologist and a chemist. The idea was submitted by Dr Ellen Kooijman, a geochemist ...
(AZ Central) -- Girl Lego builders can now use three female scientists as their protagonists in a new set so popular it is already out of stock. The 165-piece Research Institute features a female ...
Legos allow you to build pretty much anything, and now the Danish company that invented the toy is trying to build something else — support for females in technology fields. (Via Getty Images) ...
Thanks to the "Research Institute" set released by the toy company Lego last year, research geologist Circe Verba can build something that looks sort of like her job. She can pose a little Lego figure ...
ENFIELD, Conn. -- Lego has unveiled a set of figures celebrating the women of NASA. The 231-piece set features Sally Ride, the first American female astronaut, and Mae Jemison, the first black woman ...
Lego can’t understand how it got here, smack in the middle of a gender toy war, but they’ve raised a white flag by releasing several new lady scientist figures. Are you not entertained? The Research ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American It's 11:47 am on the Sunday before Labor Day, ...
We are setting sail once again with LEGO as we continue our LEGO Ideas Jaws set. Amity Island is in danger, and it is up to three ordinary men to bring a stop to the deadly attacks that have been ...
Scientists may have just found the "building bricks" for future moon bases in the toy store — and the public can soon see them there, too. European Space Agency (ESA) researchers discovered more than ...
Scientists at the European Space Agency (ESA) have turned to their love of Lego brick building when designing launch pads and shelters for astronauts visiting the moon, as part of the Artemis program.
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