Sunday, May 4, 2014

Our Man Gilliard in New Guinea



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On April 6, 2012 · Leave a Comment · In Hannah Begley, Maggie Long
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/NYC_subway_tunnels-300x124.jpgWe’ve been working hard in the Earth and Planetary Science department and have found a lot of really great stuff. In addition to the geologic maps, reports, and photographs, there are a good number of log books from projects relating to geology. One particularly interesting one, dating from 1900, contains notes of the soil and rock compositions encountered while digging the tunnels for one of the subway lines. The photographs shows one small excerpt from this large volume. It describes the composition of the material found at 165th st and Broadway.
The text in the photo reads:
136th st and Broadway. Red sand, from 14ft to 16 ft below the surface, and continuous as greater depths.
November 12th 1900
136th st and Broadway. Yellow sand, overlying the red sand, variable in depth; from 4ft to 2ft below surface, and extending to the surface.
November 12th 1900
This is one of the best examples we have seen of material relating directly to the New York City Geology, as opposed to the development of the museum’s collection or the expeditions undertaken by the museum. It was great to imagine the soil types underneath our feet and the people responsible for documenting it over 100 years ago.
On December 14, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Alison Dundy, Maggie Long
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Letter_copying_books.jpg1890s Bushnell’s copy book ad. A book of thin onion-skin-like linen paper which you would moisten and apply to a freshly written letter or document. The wet paper would absorb the ink of the original and make a perfect copy of same.
Because of the nature of the thin onion-skin-like linen paper and the age of this type of material, most of the edges are brittle and must be handled with extreme care. In addition, some of the images taken off of typewritten pages have faded. Copies made from impressions on pages written in fountain pen ink have held up better over the years.
Tagged with: Fall 2011IMLSLARAOrnithology Archives
 
On November 17, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Maggie Long
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/What_is_organized-300x225.jpg
It is one of the most fascinating aspects of working in archives. Sometimes at first glance, the messy file drawer may not look to be that organized but in essence it may be more so than a file drawer that appears to be more organized- what do we mean?
A golden rule for archivists is to follow the principle of provenance or the respect des fonds. This means to maintain the original order in which the records were created and kept. By keeping the files in their original order in which they were created can be more useful in telling something about the creator of the work.
It is a loss for us who would like to know more about what the creator of the work was really thinking when he/she put those notes in with those photographs. To the outside observer, they may not seem at all related, but they are and if someone who separates out these items and the original order is disrupted, some of the story is lost.
Some archivists are now working with the creator of the work while they are still around to ask questions so not to lose out on some small details. Having access to this information cannot be undervalued.
Tagged with: Fall 2011IMLSLARAOrnithology Archives
 
On October 20, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Maggie Long, Nick Pavlik
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Our_man_Gilliard-1-225x300.jpgE.Thomas (Ernest Thomas) Gilliard (1912-1965), an American ornithologist and AMNH museum curator, led or participated in many ornithological expeditions especially in South America and New Guinea.
Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is a country located on the island of New Guinea. It is the second largest island after Greenland.
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Our_man_Gilliard-2-1024x711.jpg
His first expedition to New Guinea occurred in 1948 when he was an assistant curator in the AMNH Ornithology department. He then went on to make six more trips within the next sixteen years. The results of his observations were published in two volumes; Birds of Paradise and Bower Birds and Handbook of New Guinea Birds, co-authored by Austin Rand, both of which can be found in the AMNH Library’s catalog.
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Our_man_Gilliard-3-697x1024.jpg
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Our_man_Gilliard-4-225x300.jpgAlso in the AMNH library’s catalog, are the published results of one of his expeditions to New Guinea:
1958-1959 Gilliard New Britain Expedition
Tagged with: CATFall 2011GilliardIMLSNew GuineaOrnithology Archives
 
On October 19, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Maggie Long, Nick Pavlik
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Whitney_south_seas-1-300x225.jpgDescription: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Whitney_south_seas-2-300x225.jpgIn 1920, at the behest of American Museum of Natural History trustee Dr. Leonard C. Sanford, Harry Payne Whitney contributed $100,000 to fund a collecting expedition for birds of Polynesia. AMNH’s Rollo H. Beck, a leader among American birds collectors, was chosen to led the Whitney South Sea expedition and did so from 1921 until 1928.
Aboard the 75-ton schooner France, the team visited almost every island in the South Seas and collected a large number of birds species during this expedition. The expedition was subsequently led by the evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr who would later in 1931 accept a curatorial position at the AMNH. In the same year, Mayr was instrumental in acquiring the Walter Rothschild collection of birds skins. Rothschild unfortunately needed to sell his collection in order to pay off a blackmailer. The funds used to purchase the Rothschild collection for the AMNH was donated by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, widow of the late Harry Payne Whitney who died in 1930.
Due to the success of this expedition, Whitney also offered matching funding to the City of New York to build an addition to the museum to be devoted entirely to the museum’s department of birds. The Whitney Wing was completed in 1935. Today’s visitors can find on the second floor of the Whitney Wing, the Whitney Hall of Oceanic Birds.
For more information, see:
Birds collected during the Whitney South Sea Expedition. 45, Notes on New Guinea birds. 8. American Museum novitates ; no. 1133 Mayr, Ernst, 1904-; Whitney South Sea Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History (1920-1941) http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/dspace/handle/2246/4833
Tagged with: CATFall 2011IMLSOrnithology ArchivesWhitney
 
On October 19, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Alison Dundy, Maggie Long
Have you Flown a Ford Lately?Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Birds_in_the_corporate_world-1-300x225.jpg
The beautiful bird illustrations by Fuertes were used by Ford Motor Company as inspiration for a new line of Lincoln Continentals, modeled on particular birds. Correspondence files with Ford contained comments like: “The Brazilian Oriole (icterus jamacali) is one of the most beautiful of the American Orioles, or hang-nests…. This contrast of orange and black has been unusually well interpreted by Judkins in his Two-Passenger Semi-Collapsible Coupe…an intimate personal car. Illustrations of the bird and the car were featured together in Ford’s marketing material for this new car.
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Birds_in_the_corporate_world-2-300x225.jpg
Tagged with: CATFall 2011FuertesIMLSOrnithology Archives
 
On October 19, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Alison Dundy, Maggie Long
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Birds_in_the_corporate_world_part1-300x219.jpgLouis Agassiz Fuertes (1874-1927), world renowned bird artist, was invited by his friend and fellow conservationist, Charles T. Church, an officer of Church & Dwight Co. Inc., to create colorful Bird Cards for their Arm & Hammer brand. These 1.5 x 3 inch cards are the precursors of baseball cards first packed in boxes of baking soda in the 1880s.
Tagged with: CATFall 2011FuertesIMLSOrnithology Archives
 
On October 6, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Maggie Long, Nick Pavlik
Today in Ornithology we were lucky enough to take a look at some original engraved copper plates and prints of John James Audubon, the 19th-century naturalist and painter who became famous for his depictions of North American birds. Curiously, also found amid the Audubon treasures was a restoration of an Archaeopteryx panel that is believed to have been done by Alexander Seidel, another well-known American painter of birds.
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Archaeopteryx-1-300x225.jpg
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Archaeopteryx-2-300x225.jpg
Archaeopteryx was a primitive ancestor of modern-day birds, sometimes referred to by scientists as the very first bird to ever exist, though its place in the evolution of birds has become the focus of some recent debate in the scientific community. In 2009, AMNH’s own Mark Norrell published a paper on the subject, and as recently as July 2011 Nature News featured an article suggesting a new candidate as nature’s first “true” bird. Whatever the ultimate verdict, we certainly enjoyed spending some time admiring the beautiful restoration of the early bird ancestor (and learning how to pronounce its name).
Tagged with: ArchaeopteryxFall 2011IMLSOrnithology Archives
 
On October 5, 2011 · Leave a Comment · In Alison Dundy, Maggie Long
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Woohoo-300x225.jpgWe continued cataloguing department files, meticulous bibliographic records for citations in published manuscripts, back in the day before “EndNote” and “WordRef.”
We then moved on to the metal cabinets containing the Department of Ornithology’s rare book collection. The books are beautifully cared for, organized alphabetically by author and appropriately housed in archival boxes, where necessary. The hand-colored plates and watercolors are the hidden gems in this archive. We were particularly impressed by the works of Japanese artists K. Koizumi and S. Tsuchioka who published paintings of 1,000 birds or flowers of Japan in 1928. Each page had an overleaf of rice paper with Japanese text explaining the bird specimen, and under the rice paper was a thick page with a gorgeous watercolor. The owls we selected to display here correspond to the (muffled) hoots by archivists when they discovered this collection.
Tagged with: CATFall 2011IMLSOrnithology Archives
 
On September 29, 2011 · 1 Comment · In Maggie Long, Nick Pavlik
Description: http://images.library.amnh.org/hiddencollections/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Louis_Agassiz_Fuertes-154x300.jpgToday in the Ornithology Department, we came across an artist file containing photographs of some eye-catching illustrations of birds. Through accompanying documentation, we learned that the original drawings were the work of bird artist Louis Agassiz Fuertes.
Fuertes (1874-1927) is considered one of the foremost American painters of birds. He graduated from Cornell University in 1897 and was associated with the institution throughout his life. He was among the most widely traveled of bird artists and accompanied many museum expeditions.
The majority of Fuertes’s field studies and paintings of birds are now in the possession of the American Museum of Natural History. The works, made from captured specimens, were invaluable to the study of ornithology because they not only recorded a bird’s appearance in life, but also recorded the color changes that occurred in the bird shortly after death.
Tagged with: CATFall 2011FuertesIMLSOrnithology Archives

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