She discovered coronaviruses decades ago—but got little recognition

Scientific pioneer June Almeida is finally being acknowledged for virology breakthroughs she made a half century ago.

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CANADA - JANUARY 02: Atkinson Charitable Foundation gift of $36;300 to the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto was denoted to duplicate this powerful electron microscope. It is urgently needed to aid research. It is urgently needed to aid research. At miscroscope is Mrs. June Almeida. Behind her Dr. Donald Parsons; in back is Dr. Arthur W. H.

When June Almeida peered into her electron microscope in 1964, she saw a round, grey dot covered in tiny spokes. She and her colleagues noted that the pegs formed a halo around the virus—much like the sun’s corona.

What she saw would become known as the coronavirus, and Almeida played a pivotal role in identifying it. That feat was all the more remarkable because the 34-year-old scientist never completed her formal education.

Born June Hart, she lived with her family in a tenement building in Glasgow, Scotland, where her father worked as a bus driver. June was a bright student with ambitions to attend university, but money was scarce. At 16, she dropped out of school and started working as a lab technician at Glasgow Royal Infirmary, where she used microscopes to help analyze tissue samples.

After moving to a similar job at St Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, she met the man who would become her husband, Venezuelan artist Enriques Almeida. The pair immigrated to Canada, and June got a job working with electron microscopes at the Ontario Cancer Institute...

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