Posters
Statement of Purpose
This page offers SPNHC members a permanent place to share and expand the reach of posters shared at SPNHC events such as our yearly conference. Otherwise, posters tend to be ephemeral. Poster content aggregates a LOT of intellectual capital. Let us all change community practice to give posters, people, and the content generated, a broader reach, and longer shelf life.
Realizing the import of collections and related materials [1][2][3], SPNHC recognizes the need to collaborate to develop, discover, disseminate and update best (better, current, recommended) practices for creating digital collections resources and publishing them for global access. Posters linked here represent the efforts of many collections worldwide. All in the collections and standards community are encouraged to contribute.
2020 Virtual
This table shares all posters as part of the SPNHC and ICOM NATHHIST Virtual 2020 Conference [LINK] .
2020 Gallery
What's hidden in your herbarium? The undiscovered names of the Lacistemataceae by Fi Young
keywords Lacistemataceae, species, common names, herbarium |
Playing for Learning in the Museum: A Case for Understanding Human-Nature relationship through Game-Based Learning by Gil Olivira, Nicolas Kramar
keywords Anthropocene, gamification, nature museum, personal epistemology |
A Rocking Revamp: How an IMLS Grant Brought a Fresh Look to the Sternberg Museum Geology Collection by Christina Byrd, Alexa Franks, Laura Wilson
keywords geology, database, curation, collection management, conservation |
Contraction of Flowering Phenology in Greenland Herbarium Specimens but not Field Observations by Maude Grenier
keywords herbarium, phenology, score, flowering, time-series |
Capturing the Flowers of the Sierra Nevada Mountains: The Contribution of the Fresno State Herbarium (FSC) to the California Phenology Network
by Katherine Waselkov, Reece Riley, Maria Peña, Katelin Pearson, Jenn Yost |
Sowing SEEDS: A model for museum-based teacher certification and environmental outreach programs
by Julia Robinson keywords outreach, education, environmental education, specimens, science education |
Contributors
Current content contributors: SPNHC members Deborah Paul, Emily Braker. We hope that others will add their names to this list as information is added and updated.
References
- ↑ Lawrence M. Page, Bruce J. MacFadden, Jose A. Fortes, Pamela S. Soltis, Greg Riccardi, Digitization of Biodiversity Collections Reveals Biggest Data on Biodiversity, BioScience, Volume 65, Issue 9, 01 September 2015, Pages 841–842, https://doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biv104
- ↑ Nelson, G., & Ellis, S. (2019, January 7). The history and impact of digitization and digital data mobilization on biodiversity research. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. Royal Society Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2017.0391
- ↑ Monfils, A. K., Powers, K. E., Marshall, C. J., Martine, C. T., Smith, J. F., & Prather, L. A. (2017). Natural History Collections: Teaching about Biodiversity Across Time, Space, and Digital Platforms. Southeastern Naturalist, 16(sp10), 47–57. https://doi.org/10.1656/058.016.0sp1008