Elisabeth Deichmann was born on 12 June 1896 in
Copenhagen, the capital of
Denmark, to physician Henrik Deichmann and artist Christine Lund Deichmann. In 1918, she was appointed as assistant
zoologist at the
Royal Agricultural College of Copenhagen, working for the zoologist
Johan Erik Vesti Boas. She received her
M.Sc. from the
University of Copenhagen in 1922 while continuing to work at the college. Deichmann received a Danish Rask-Ørsted Foundation grant to study at
Stanford University's
Hopkins Marine Station in 1924. She worked for the
British Museum in 1926. She received her
Ph.D from
Radcliffe College in 1927 and became assistant zoologist at the
United States Bureau of Fisheries at
Woods Hole the following year. She received an Agassiz Fellowship at the
Museum of Comparative Zoology at
Harvard University in 1929 and became assistant
curator of
marine invertebrates in 1930 under the supervision of
Hubert Lyman Clark. She was promoted to curator in 1942 and retired in 1961 but retained an
emerita post until her death in 1975. In addition to her curatorial work, she spent the summers of 1931, 1933, and 1936 teaching a course about marine invertebrates at Stanford University. Deichmann died on 9 August 1975 at the age of 79 in
Beverly Farms,
Massachusetts. ==Activities and awards==