Sudipta Sengupta graduated from
Jadavpur University with top honors in both the
B.Sc. and
M.Sc. examinations. She obtained her
Ph.D. degree from Jadavpur University in 1972 under the supervision of
Dr. Subir Kumar Ghosh. She worked as a geologist in the Geological Survey of India between 1970 and 1973. In 1973, she received the prestigious scholarship of the
Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 from U.K. and carried out post-doctoral research work for the next three years at the
Imperial College,
London. In 1977 she joined the Institute of Geology of
Uppsala University, Sweden as a docent for six months and thereafter carried out research as a visiting scientist in connection with the
International Geodynamics Project which was supervised by Professor
Hans Ramberg. On her return to India in 1979, she joined the Geological Survey of India as a Senior Geologist. In 1982, she joined Jadavpur University as a lecturer and retired as a Professor. Sengupta recounts that "for the first 15 years of my life, there were hardly any women in the class - in most of the years none." She talks about the fact that the university wasn't prepared to accommodate women during field-trips. Conditions didn't improve until 1996, Sengupta says "In our times, it was terrible. We stayed in dharamshalas and sometimes huts." Sengupta also talks about the fact that in some ways it was better in her days. She went on her PhD studied alone and traveled to remote places with "bad roads and no communication, but never felt unsafe" but that these days she "wouldn't dare to send a girl alone for field work." == Mountaineering ==