soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com
Rob | So You Think You Can Digitize
https://soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com/author/robgur
So You Think You Can Digitize. A blog about natural history museum digitization projects, data sharing, and informatics. Three "B's" of importance: biodiversity, bikes and bunnies. I get to express these "B's" in neat ways - - I bike to a job at the University of Florida where I am an Associate Curator of Biodiversity Informatics. Along with caretaking collections, I also have a small zoo at home, filled with two disapproving bunnies. January 14, 2014. Data Diversity of the Week: Sex. July 18, 2013.
soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com
Data Diversity of the Week: Sex | So You Think You Can Digitize
https://soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com/2013/07/18/data-diversity-of-the-week-sex
So You Think You Can Digitize. A blog about natural history museum digitization projects, data sharing, and informatics. This week in digitization: The good, the buggy, and the curious. How is finding a consensus among citizen science transcriptions like aligning gene sequences AND textual analysis of medieval codices? Part 1 →. Data Diversity of the Week: Sex. July 18, 2013. SYTYCD would like to welcome guest blogger, John Wieczorek (also known as Tuco). Data aggregators such as VertNe. Well, from just ...
soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com
Andrea | So You Think You Can Digitize
https://soyouthinkyoucandigitize.wordpress.com/author/akthom
So You Think You Can Digitize. A blog about natural history museum digitization projects, data sharing, and informatics. Andrea is a Ph.D. student in Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and is supported by the Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship. Re:Sourcing Primary Materials: Notes from A Workshop. April 1, 2014. January 29, 2014. This week in digitization: The good, the buggy, and the curious. April 30, 2013. This will be old news to...
paoloviscardi.com
Friday mystery object #256 answer | Zygoma
https://paoloviscardi.com/2015/07/17/friday-mystery-object-256-answer
Adventures in natural history collections. Welcome to Zygoma. This is my personal blog and the views expressed here are not those of my employer (the Grant Museum of Zoology, University College London), they are mine and solely mine. The disclaimer out of the way, I hope you enjoy my mystery object on Fridays and my occasional thoughts on a variety of scientific, sceptical and museological subjects. Friday mystery object #256 answer. I’m pleased to say that Laura McCoy. July 17, 2015. Tags: Friday myster...
invertpaleo.blogspot.com
Spineless Wonders: iDigBio's Push for Digitization
http://invertpaleo.blogspot.com/2014/05/idigbios-push-for-digitization.html
Friday, May 9, 2014. IDigBio's Push for Digitization. Some of you may have heard of a little group called iDigBio. It started a few years back with a big grant from NSF. It is working to help natural history collections around the United States (both university collections and museum collections) digitize their materials. I have worked with iDigBio on various projects over the last few years, and I wanted to extol their virtues here briefly. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). View my complete profile.
invertpaleo.blogspot.com
Spineless Wonders: Geolex gets a facelift
http://invertpaleo.blogspot.com/2014/06/geolex-gets-facelift.html
Thursday, June 5, 2014. Geolex gets a facelift. Nancy Stamm and the USGS have performed those of us who work in natural history collections a huge service by developing and maintaining the Geolex site. For those of you who don't know, this is a huge compilation of stratigraphic names from around the United States. It includes reference histories for units, preferred names, and updated names. You might be asking yourself how could it possibly get any better, right? And an interactive topographic mapview.
invertpaleo.blogspot.com
Spineless Wonders: May 2013
http://invertpaleo.blogspot.com/2013_05_01_archive.html
Friday, May 17, 2013. Moroccan Marrellomorphs part 2. It took me forever and a day, but here are the closeups of the marrellomorph I mentioned back in February:. Besides the sheer aesthetic beauty of the specimen, it has lovely preservation of gill-like appendages on its trunk. Here's a closeup of the bottom left photo:. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). The Life You (And I) Never Knew. Moroccan Marrellomorphs part 2. View my complete profile.
invertpaleo.blogspot.com
Spineless Wonders: February 2013
http://invertpaleo.blogspot.com/2013_02_01_archive.html
Tuesday, February 5, 2013. It's a wintry morning here in Connecticut, so I decided to add a little bit of desert sunshine to the world. I have been unpacking a new shipment of Moroccan fossils that we just received, and I came across this little beauty:. I know the picture isn't great, but I don't have a full camera set up out there. Maybe soon I'll take some close up shots with the microscope so that you can see its gills! Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). The Life You (And I) Never Knew.
invertpaleo.blogspot.com
Spineless Wonders: June 2012
http://invertpaleo.blogspot.com/2012_06_01_archive.html
Wednesday, June 20, 2012. A friend of mine is on her way to China to study the end-Permian mass extinction. Follow her exploits here. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). The Life You (And I) Never Knew. View my complete profile.
publichistorian.wordpress.com
Public Historian | history on the web, in the museum, and beyond | Page 2
https://publichistorian.wordpress.com/page/2
History on the web, in the museum, and beyond. July 21, 2014. Posted by Suzanne Fischer under museums. One of the sharpest museum blogs is back. Perhaps one day I will also be back.). July 14, 2014. 8220;the emphatic lives of the long dead”. Posted by Suzanne Fischer under public history. 8211;Elizabeth Bowen,. The House in Paris. March 18, 2014. Sustainable Practices for Co-Created Exhibits. Posted by Suzanne Fischer under museums. In sunny, convenient Monterey. February 5, 2014. Why we do research.
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