Dictionary
discoverer
noun
One who discovers; the person who discovered something.
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The word 'discoverer' is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to someone who first finds or uncovers something previously unknown or unseen. Example: Christopher Columbus is known as the discoverer of America, as he was the first European to land on the continent in 1492.
Exact(57)
One lock is called the Hayflick limit after its discoverer, Leonard Hayflick.
Clyde Tombaugh, the head of optics at the missile range and the discoverer of the dwarf planet Pluto, took him under his wing and helped him build telescopes from cast-off technology.
They must have been advocates of Mr Boyle's friendly nemesis, Mike Brown, author of How I Killed Pluto and a discoverer of Eris, an object near to and similar to Pluto.
A more important case is Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that transmits yellow fever and dengue, which, to the horror and confusion of medical entomologists, was renamed Stegomyia aegypti on what many consider flimsy evidence.What name a genuinely new species is given, though, is entirely up to the discoverer.
This shortens the telomere and, after 50-70 such divisions (a number known as the Hayflick limit, after its discoverer), a chromosome can grow no shorter and the cell it is in can divide no more.That provides a backstop against cancer.
Jim Watson was, with Francis Crick, the discoverer of the structure of DNA.
On January 15th (see article) we said that Sir Harry Kroto, the discoverer of Buckminsterfullerene, was at the University of Florida.
They believed the role of the documentarian was, as Albert himself once put it, to be "an author, but not a director, a discoverer, not a controller".
Similar(3)
James Watson, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, told a British newspaper that Africans' intelligence was "not really" equal to "ours", and implied that black people made disappointing employees.
The two questions that arise over and over again are "is it a result of nature or nurture?" and "to the extent it is nature, does race make a difference?"Making stupid comments about the second question can be a career-killing move, as James Watson, a co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, recently found.
Much of this can be attributed to Emil Kraepelin, a German psychiatrist and co-discoverer of Alzheimer's disease, who argued that biological pathology underlay each of the major psychiatric disorders.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com