A Dutch lock is closed for the spring, and its employees want you to tell them when migrating fish come knocking by ringing a digital doorbell
A Dutch lock is closed for the spring, and its employees want you to tell them when migrating fish come knocking by ringing a digital doorbell
Hand holding a bird study skin of an oriole
Of course, I dug into the bins of birds and exchanged emails with a retired ornithologist for hot tips on where to find wood ducks at the end of March.
Child standing at a table on which some taxidermy specimens of birds are placed, as well as a bin of bird study skins of ducks.
I recently joined the Peterborough Field Naturalists @ptbonature.bsky.social with my child and was happy to witness taxidermy as a tool for hands-on learning for the โjunior naturalistsโ last weekend at Trent University. #animalhist
Most of the tags read โwindow collisionโ as cause of death.
Restoration ecology fieldwork is delightful and deeply creepy in equal measure.
#Histsci #envhist
Searching for Birds, an engaging visualization of eBird and Google Trends data that reveals human curiosity about birds. [searchingforbirds.visualcinnamon.com]
In the late 1930s, Henry Ruschmann patented a high-speed machine for cutting photographic prints, which produced small, glossy cellulose โschnibblesโ as waste. His employees took these fragments home to use as artificial snow, and glitter was born.
Yes! I think I can make this. Sounds fantastic.
1/ The NYU Wild Animal Welfare Program is hiring a Postdoctoral Associate!
The NYU Wild Animal Welfare Program is currently seeking a postdoctoral associate to join an interdisciplinary research project focused on wild animals in urban environments.
CFP: The Invisible Image: Photography and the Unseen (Liverpool, 18-19 Jun 26)
https://arthist.net/archive/51566
โA flock of ring-necked parakeets that were filmed feasting on the wall of a 19th Century barn were echoing Amazonian feeding habitsโฆnear Welwyn in Hertfordshire.โ [bbc.com]
Mid century wood duck housing design! Four photographs demonstrating the design and installation of a galvanized metal pipe wood duck nest box. Itโs got a cylinder base and a cone shape roof.
This booklet features info on the latest research on wood duck conservation using nest boxes, how to build and install them yourself, and various designs to do so.
Hand holding booklet โHousing for Wood Ducks,โ published by the Illinois Natural History Survey (1953). On the cover is a painting of two Wood Ducks using an artificial bird nesting box made out of wood.
Currently reading the booklet โHousing for Wood Ducks,โ published by the Illinois Natural History Survey (1953) and want to know more about the making, circulation, and use of natural history circulars from the mid cent. Any suggestions for readings/info on this topic? #envhist #histSTM
Wow! Congrats Simone!
We love the cover too! Thatโs an anonymous European red deer being transported from the Southern Alps of New Zealand by helicopter for the venison industry, c. 1970s. The photographer, Bryan Bassett-Smith has lots of harrowing stories involving tranquilizers, deer, helicopters
now available for pre-order from UNC Press ๐
Use code 01SOCIAL30 at checkout to save 30%!
Sharing some praise โบ๏ธ โAn essential and timely intervention. The authors demonstrate how global processes have always been more-than-human events and, by centering animals, they offer exciting, cutting-edge vantages on crucial global histories.โโDaniel Vandersommers
โจGlobalizing Wildlifeโจ: A call to reconceptualize globalization and wildlife through their entanglements. The volume presents a range of geographically- and species-diverse case studies spanning from the 1870s to the present day to show that globalizing wildlife is far from a homogenous process.
So proud to have co-edited the forthcoming volume, โGlobalizing Wildlife,โ with @rafdebont.bsky.social and Tom Quick ๐๐๐๐๐ฆ๐ฆ๐
๐ฆฆ from @uncpress.bsky.social in their series Flows, Migrations, and Exchanges
www.uncpress.org/book/9781469...
So many amazing humans contributed to this book, writing about all kinds of ๐๐๐ animals: rhinos, chimps, parrots, horses, rats, monkeys, bees, otters, mongoose, tigers, elephants, pigeons, bears and more! #animalhist
Andy Goldsworthy. His work at the Getty Research Institute for the solstice oculus was destroyed by their sprinkler system โฆ
Inside Goodallโs cabin at Gombe. Piles of books, skulls of apes and other animals, empty wine bottles and candles.
One of Goodallโs bookshelves, with a stuffed baboon toy.
Old chimp feeding station at Gombe.
Besides the chimps, the material legacy of her research there was especially memorable for me. Her cabin (and all the books, skulls, and objects collected by her and others over the years), her son โgrubโโs house that kept him safe from the baboons, the old feeding station. #animalhist
Entranceway to Gombe National Park, Tanzania in 2019. โCare, conserve and protect for future generationsโ
Thinking about Jane Goodall, and grateful to have spent time at Gombe as a @anthropogeny.org graduate student in 2019.
Love the title!
These are incredible! Are they still used by p. martins or just for show now?
"This is an essential text for scholars working on environmental, animal, scientific, and segregation histories in South Africa and beyond". The first review of my book is out on Animal History. A big thank you to Mia Uys for this generous review.
online.ucpress.edu/ah/article-a...
Self portrait of William Finley and Herman Bohlman with two golden eagles. The photographers sit at the edge of a large nest, five feet wide, where two young golden eagles sit. One holds a camera while the other a box of glass plates.
Sharing my fav photo from my research on the work of Herman Bohlman and William and Irene Finley: A self portrait with golden eagles, taken from 158 feet up a sycamore tree, 1904. #animalhist
Poster for โInterspecies Interactions in the Visual Arts (1550-1914) Collaborations, Experiments, Oppositionsโ international symposium held May 21-23, 2025.
Excited to talk #animalhist with other art historians today at the โInterspecies Interactions in the Visual Artsโsymposium, org by @claralanger.bsky.social and Oriane Poret. Iโll be speaking about seeking a โbirdโs eye viewโ in avian photography, and finding (un)wanted encounters.
Todayโs my first day as a SSHRC Postdoc Fellow at Trent University! Iโll be working on a media history of (bird) conservation in 20th cent N America. ๐ชฟ๐ฆ๐ฆโโฌ๐ฆ
Grateful to have research support, be back in Canada, and look forward to working with @finisdunaway.bsky.social
#envhist #animalhist