Posters
Contents
Statement of Purpose
This page offers SPNHC members a place to share conference posters following annual meetings to provide a lasting resource to the natural history community.
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 and serve as an attempt to broaden the reach and longevity of poster information beyond the annual conference window.
Poster Guidelines & Sharing
Interested in sharing a SPHNC poster presented at a past meeting? Best Practices committee members are soliciting copies of SPNHC posters from previous conference years to add to the SPNHC wiki. Authors should ensure that they have permissions to publicly share the images and information embedded in posters prior to publishing to the wiki.
In order to standardize content and maintain a web-friendly poster resolution, we ask that authors send digital copies of posters and relevant metadata to the Best Practices committee rather than upload directly to the wiki. Please provide the following information to Emily Braker:
- Conference year or venue (helpful for finding abstract)
- Author name(s) and affiliation(s)
- Keywords (up to 5)
- Poster formatted as a PDF, down-sampled to ~1500 pixel widths (if you are unfamiliar with resizing, a Best Practices member can do this for you). Full-resolution posters that are not down-sampled can very easily break the wiki since they can consume as much as 1GB memory to process.
- Optional: - email contact, ORCID ID, twitter handle (include only if you are willing share with wiki viewers).
Thank you to all poster contributors, and we encourage past SPNHC poster authors to consider sharing their work on the wiki so that it will continue to serve as a resource for others. Note that 2021 was a virtual conference year with no SPNHC poster submissions.
2022 Gallery
This table shares posters from the 37th SPNHC Annual Meeting held jointly with BHL and NatSCA, Edingburgh 2022.
Strengths and limitations and of iNaturalist for plant research Jordi López-Pujol, Neus Nualart, Neus Ibáñez |
Musings of a paleontology community of practice at the Museum of Comparative Zoology Christina J. Byrd, Crystal A. Maier, Jessica D. Cundiff |
PyrΔTE: an AI-based pyrite tarnish probability generator Kathryn Royce, Morgan Davis, Ben Leyland |
Vascular plants from North Africa deposited in the BC herbarium Noemí Montes-Moreno, Neus Ibáñez, Neus Nualart |
Georeferencing and Mapping Fossil Vertebrate Localities into the Bureau of Land Management’s Colorado Statewide Locality Database Jacob Van Veldhuizen, Chelsea Trenbeath, Chelsea Herbertson |
Arctos - GloBI Collaboration Update: Continuing to Extend Digital Records across Communities, Platforms, Collections, and Institutions Jorrit H. Poelen, Teresa J. Mayfield-Meyer, Andrew C. Doll |
Platycerium bifurcatum – one of the world's oldest houseplants? Yvette Harvey |
"Shell games": A case study of storage and rehousing paleontological and geological specimens after critical infrastructure upgrades to a collection space Lisa Boucher, Liath Appleton |
‘The Art of Observation of things’: Agostino Scilla’s (1629-1700) fossil shark-toothed dolphin (Squalodon melitensis) jaw from the Woodwardian Collection at the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge Dan Pemberton |
Using OpenRefine for natural history collections data Erica Krimmel, Lindsay Walker |
State of the Arch: The recent removal, conservation, 3D scanning and reinstatement of the large 135-year-old ‘double’ whalebone arch located in The Meadows in Edinburgh, UK Nigel Larkin, Steven Dey |
Mussel memory: Digitization of the Unionida at the Buffalo Museum of Science Paige Langle, Marisa Turk, Isabel Hannes |
Arctos: Community-Based Collaborative Collection Management for Natural and Cultural History Data Mariel Campbell, Emily Braker, Carla Cicero, Andrew Doll, Kyndall Hildebrandt, Lindsey Frederick, Michelle Koo, Angela Linn,Teresa Mayfield-Meyer, Carol Spencer, Christopher Witt, Elizabeth Wommack |
Outside the box; Specimens of the Malacology Department, at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology Jennifer Trimble |
Caught between a Rock and a Pandemic: Finishing an Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) Fossil Digitization Project during the Covid-19 Pandemic Paul Mayer |
Specimen Discovery through Community Science Efforts at the Botanical Research Institute of Texas Ashley Bordelon, Jessica Lane, Tiana Rehman |
WSY Herbarium - Our Digital Future Mandeep Matharu, Lydia Walles, Mrs Sian Tyrrell |
How dangerous is the oldest stuffed tuna in the world? Mike Rutherford |
EarthCape - highly configurable and extensible collection management platform for natural history collections Evgeniy Meyke |
Extant and Extraordinary: The Recent Brachiopod Collection At The Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Vanessa Delnavaz |
Converging Content Between Archives and Museums Using Existing Resources: T.D.A. Cockerell and the Florissant Fossils Sean Babbs, Helen Baer, Talia Karim, Barbara Losoff |
Celebrating an herbarium milestone: CONN's 200,000th databased specimen Sarah Taylor, Michelle Hernandez, Bernard Goffinet |
Leveraging collaborations to increase digitization efforts in small museums Alexandra Coconis, Rebecca Glasgow, Nathan Gerth, Chris Feldman |
The Mineral Susceptibility Database: a new tool for mineral preservation' Kathryn Royce |
Taxa proposed by Pourret based on the specimens conserved in Salvador Herbarium (18th century) Laura Gavioli, Neus Nualart, Neus Ibáñez 2021 GalleryThe 36th SPNHC Annual Meeting held jointly with AIC was a virtual meeting due to the continuing COVID pandemic. Conference chairs received no electronic poster submissions from SPNHC members for this meeting. 2020 GalleryThis table shares all posters as part of the SPNHC and ICOM NATHHIST Virtual 2020 Conference. Hover over images for poster keywords.
2019 GalleryThis gallery shares a selection of posters from the SPNHC 2019 Conference hosted in Chicago. Hover over images for poster keywords. Posters in this gallery are part of a retrocapture project and therefore not all posters presented at the 2019 meeting are represented below. Poster authors interested in sharing digital versions of posters from previous SPNHC meetings should contact Emily Braker.
ContributorsCurrent content contributors: SPNHC members Emily Braker, Deborah Paul. References
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- ↑ 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