In 1900, she won the 1851 Exhibition Memorial Scholarship, which annually awards a three-year research scholarship to '"young scientists or engineers of exceptional promise".[2]
In 1903, she was appointed honorary zoologist to the Board of Agriculture, and won the Royal Society's Mackinnon studentship for research into Biological Sciences.[5]
She was one of the first woman to speak at the Linnean Society, Burlington House, London.[6] Her paper, delivered on 4 June 1903, was entitled: "Anatomy and Development of a Hymeropterous Parasite of a Scaly Insect (Lecanium Hemisphoericum)".[7] Among with fifteen other women, she was made a Fellow of the Linnean Society in 1905.[8] The Linnean Society archives hold Embleton's correspondence with the Society, of which she remained a Fellow until 1917.[9]
In 1906 she co-published the papers, "On the synapsis in amphibia"[10] and "On the origin of the sertoli".[11]
Embleton was connected with a number of noted suffragists, including Evelina Haverfield, Vera Holme, and Celia Wray. The 1911 census shows that Embleton was visiting Wray at Fairfield House, Barnsley on the day of the census. Like many suffragists, the two women defaced the census paper by recording their occupation as "Getting votes for women".[13]
The four women set up the private 'Foosack League' between themselves, the membership of which was restricted to women and suffragists.[14] Evidence suggests the Foosack League was a lesbian secret society.[15] The Women's Library holds correspondence between the women during World War I, in which Embleton is referred to as 'Alick', and Wray as 'Mr Wary'.[16] In her later years, Embleton lived with Wray at The Elms in Saxmundham in Suffolk.
^Linnean Society of London (17 November 1904). Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. London, Published for the Linnean Society of London by Academic Press [etc.]
^"Archives". The Linnean Society. Retrieved 16 August 2020.