We often credit scientific progress to recent developments, to the near present. What this fails to take into account are the thousands of years of scientific research, particularly during the Islamic Golden Age. Many of the figures involved during that time are then lost to the annals of history. One of them was Mariam Al Astrulabi, a Syrian Muslim woman, whose astrolabe sparked the beginning of development in the field of astronautics and space navigation. "Mariam was born in 950 AD in Aleppo, Syria. She is credited for developing the first 'complex' astrolabe, with her invention akin to a GPS navigation tool for the stars" One could logically suggest that the
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