Laurie Rousseau-Nepton says she wants to understand the very large and the very small, and that's why she became the first Indigenous woman in Canada to earn a PhD in astrophysics. Rousseau-Nepton received her PhD in 2017 from Université Laval in Quebec City. She said that at the time she wasn't aware she was the first Indigenous woman in Canada to do that.
But she said she did realize that ancestral knowledge from her community was missing in the study of the stars. "I made it a quest to find it back, to retrieve that knowledge and reconnect it," Rousseau-Nepton said. On that quest, she found a story that showed evidence of her Innu ancestors observing solar eclipses.
"I started looking and found a beautiful story about eclipses and those stories really highlighted the fact that our ancestors really had a deep understanding of those phenomena, and to me it was like, eye-opening. I wanted to know more." Video This Innu astrophysicist keeps the oral tradition alive by sharing Indigenous eclipse stories Cree mythology written in the stars Rousseau-Nepton, who is Innu and a member of Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation in Quebec, said Indigenous ancestors had a passion for learning and understanding physical concepts of the world around them.
She said this dedication to the natural world can contribute to new discoveries in science today. "Our identity in studying and learning has to be important ..
. has to take a large space," she said. Rousseau-Nepton is an assistant professor at.
