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Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University

The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, formerly the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, is the oldest natural science research institution and museum in the Americas. It was founded in 1812, by many of the leading naturalists of the young American republic with an expressed mission of "the encouragement and cultivation of the sciences". It has sponsored expeditions, conducted original environmental and systematics research, and amassed natural history collections containing more than 17 million specimens. The Academy also organizes public exhibits and educational programs for both schools and the general public.

Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University
Location within Philadelphia
Established1812
Location1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Coordinates39°57′25″N 75°10′17″W / 39.9570°N 75.1714°W / 39.9570; -75.1714Coordinates: 39°57′25″N 75°10′17″W / 39.9570°N 75.1714°W / 39.9570; -75.1714
TypeNatural history museum
Collection size17+ million specimens
PresidentScott Cooper, PhD
Public transit access SEPTA bus: 32, 33, Suburban Station
Websitewww.ansp.org
Official nameAcademy of Natural Sciences
TypeCity
DesignatedMay 15, 2013
Location302 Market St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Marker TextFounded nearby in 1812, it is the oldest natural science institution in the Americas. It remains an invaluable resource for the study of life on Earth, with outstanding exhibits and scientific collections. Relocated to Logan Square in 1876, part of Drexel University since 2011.

History

During the first decades of the United States, Philadelphia was the cultural capital and one of the country's commercial centers.[1] Two of the city's institutions, the Library Company[2] and the American Philosophical Society,[3] were centers of enlightened thought and scientific inquiry.

The increasing sophistication of the earth and life sciences, combined with a growing awareness of the great variety of life and landscape in the American wilderness waiting to be discovered, led a small group of naturalists to establish the Academy of Natural Sciences in the winter of 1812.[4] The academy was meant to foster a gathering of fellow naturalists, and nurture the growth and credibility of American science. They frequently looked to their European counterparts for inspiration and expertise and longed to be regarded as equals. On 25 April 1817 they were incorporated into the society under the title of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia by the legislature of Pennsylvania. By 1 January 1818, eight members were published.[5]

In 2011, the Academy became affiliated with nearby Drexel University and changed its name to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University.[6][7]

Notable members

Within a decade of its founding, the Academy became the undisputed center of natural sciences in the United States.[citation needed] Academy members were frequently enlisted to participate in national surveys of the western territories and other major expeditions.[5] Several of its earliest members, including William Bartram,[8] John Godman,[9] Richard Harlan,[10] Angelo Heilprin,[11] Charles Alexandre Lesueur,[12] William Maclure,[13] Titian Peale,[14] Charles Pickering, Thomas Say, and Alexander Wilson were among the pioneers or recognized authorities in their respective areas of study.[15] Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, John Edwards Holbrook of South Carolina, Thomas Nuttall and Richard Owen of the United Kingdom, Georges Cuvier of France, and Alexander von Humboldt of Prussia were among the corresponding members (members who lived far from Philadelphia) of the Academy's first decades.[5]

Later during the 19th century, other notable naturalists and scientists,[16] including John James Audubon, Charles S. Boyer, John Cassin, Edward Drinker Cope, Ezra Townsend Cresson, Richard Harlan, Ferdinand V. Hayden, Isaac Lea, William W. Jefferis, John Lawrence LeConte, Joseph Leidy,[17] Samuel George Morton, George Ord, and James Rehn were members. Corresponding members included Charles Darwin along with his supporters Asa Gray,[18] and Thomas Henry Huxley.

For much of its history, new members had to be nominated by two current members and then elected by the remaining members. These requirements were dropped in 1924. Notable 20th-century scientists include James Böhlke, James Bond, Henry Weed Fowler, Ruth Patrick, Henry Pilsbry, H. Radclyffe Roberts, and Witmer Stone.

Collections and research

The Academy of Natural Sciences holds an internationally important natural history collection. Currently, there are over 18 million biological specimens, and hundreds of thousands of volumes, journals, illustrations, photographs, and archival items in its library. These collections were obtained through multiple means, including the donation or purchase of existing collections or individual items, the collection activities of Academy-sponsored expeditions, or those of individual scientists, whether or not they work at the Academy. Some collections were originally gathered by other institutions. For example, a number of the natural history collections at the American Philosophical Society were relocated to the Academy by the end of the 19th century.

Traditionally, researchers at natural science (or natural history) institutions such as the Academy engaged in biological taxonomy, the science of discovering, describing, naming, and classifying species. In recent decades, research has shifted in emphasis to the science of systematics, the study of the evolutionary relationships among these species. The Academy preserves many type specimens, the reference material that helps establish a species' identity. They also preserve additional specimens with which scientists can investigate the nature of these species, their relationships with other species, their evolutionary history, or their conservation status.

 
The Academy in 1912

Museum collections and research programs

The Academy's collections include a wide range of specimens across the tree of life. The museum also maintains several historically important collections.

Botany

Botany is study of plants, including nonvascular bryophytes (mosses, liverworts, and hornworts) and vascular plants, including ferns, conifers and flowering plants. The field of botany has also traditionally included the study of algae, lichens, and fungi which are now classified in different biological kingdoms. Collections at the Academy, which are housed in the Philadelphia Herbarium (PH), the oldest institutional herbarium in the New World,[19] include some of the oldest and most important botanical collections in the Americas.[20] Notable early collectors include Benjamin Smith Barton, Constatine Rafinesque, Thomas Meehan, Thomas Nuttall, and Fredrick Pursh.[20][21] Today, the herbarium contains approximately 1.5 million specimens of vascular plants, fungi, lichens, algae, and fossil plants, 40,000 of which are types.[19] It also contains some special collections, including the plants collected by Johann and Georg Forster during the voyages of Captain James Cook,[20] and by Meriwether Lewis during the Lewis and Clark expedition (Corps of Discovery).[22] The department's current focus is plant biodiversity and evolution focusing on Apocynaceae (milkweed or dogbane family) and Polygalaceae.[19]

Diatoms

The Academy's Diatom Herbarium, the largest in the Americas and the second largest in the world, contains approximately 220,000 slides of these microscopic algae.[23] The herbarium contains many specimens contributed by notable collectors, a diversity of fossil diatoms, and diatoms collected as part of numerous freshwater environmental surveys in the United States.[24] The Diatom Herbarium also provides collections and taxonomic services for the Phycology Section of the Patrick Center for Environmental Research. Former curators of note include Charles S. Boyer, Ruth Patrick, and Charles Reimer.[25]

Entomology

Entomology has been important to the Academy since its founding. Two of its earliest members include Thomas Say, regarded as the father of American entomology, and Titian Peale, a leading natural history illustrator and the chief naturalist on the United States Exploring Expedition (1834–1842). The entomology collection currently contains more than 3.5 million specimens and includes the Titian Peale Moth and Butterfly Collection, the oldest entomology collection in the United States. Curator Emeritus, Daniel Otte, an expert on Orthoptera (crickets, grasshoppers, and their relatives) is a pioneer of presenting biological data on the internet through the creation of the Orthoptera Species File. Curator and Entomology Department Chair, Jon Gelhaus is a leading expert on crane flies and manages the Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey.

Ichthyology

Ichthyology has also been a part of Academy collections and research since its beginnings, but the size of the collection was relatively modest until acquisition of Edward Drinker Cope's personal collections in 1898. A few years later, Henry Weed Fowler began his tenure at the Academy, during which he systematized the collections and described 1,408 species. James E. Böhlke, William Saul, and William Smith-Vaniz are among the notable scientist who followed Fowler. Curator Emeritus, John Lundberg, an expert in catfishes, pioneered deep channel collecting in large tropical rivers and is the lead author of a seminal scientific paper on the biological and geographic history of the Amazon River Basin. The Ichthyology collection, which currently houses nearly 1.2 million specimens and nearly 3,000 types, is one of the most important such collections in the United States. The department also hosts the All Catfish Species Inventory (a comprehensive online resource on catfish) and Catfish Bones (an online digital atlas of catfish morphology), and is a participant in Neodat II (an online resource of Neotropic ichthyology collections).

Malacology

Two of the early members of the Academy, Thomas Say and Isaac Lea, were malacologists (see also conchologists). R. Tucker Abbott, Samuel Stehman Haldeman, Henry A. Pilsbry, and George W. Tryon, Jr. were other noted malacologists who worked at the Academy. The Academy's malacology collection is the oldest such collection in the United States and is the 3rd largest in the world. It currently contains over 10 million specimens, including types erected by more than 400 authors. Curator Gary Rosenberg, an expert on Jamaican land snails, is a leader in digitised museum collections and research data. Research websites include the Malacology Georeferencing Project an online database of Western Atlantic Marine Mollusca (Malacolog), and the database. Research associate and former curator Daniel L. Graf, an expert on Unionidae (freshwater mussels), maintains the MUSSEL Project web site.

Ornithology

The majority of ornithologists active in the United States during the first half of the 19th century, including Charles Lucien Bonaparte, George Ord, Titian Ramsay Peale, John James Audubon, John Cassin, Thomas Nuttall, and John Kirk Townsend, were active members of the Academy. Later notable Academy ornithologists include James Bond, Frank Gill, Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee, Pete Myers, Fred Sheldon, and Witmer Stone. With nearly 200,000 specimens representing over 9,000 species, the Ornithology collection is one of the largest and most taxonomically complete bird collections in the world. The Delaware Valley Ornithological Club (DVOC) has held regular meetings at the Academy since 1890.

Vertebrate paleontology

 
A 43 ft. (13 m) complete fossil specimen of Mosasaur species Tylosaurus proriger (with a human for scale) is on display.

Vertebrate paleontology in the United States originated in Philadelphia through the efforts of naturalists and scientists associated with the American Philosophical Society (APS) during the first decade of the 19th century and at The Academy of Natural Sciences thereafter. By the end of the 19th century, the holdings from the APS, including the , had been transferred to the Academy for safekeeping. Currently, the collection contains more than 22,000 specimens, including many types. Richard Harlan was an early member who introduced many American naturalists to the groundbreaking works of Georges Cuvier. , who described Hadrosaurus and alerted the scientific world to the paleontological treasures of the American West, is considered the "father" of American vertebrate paleontology. Edward Drinker Cope, who also worked extensively on other vertebrates, is best known for his rivalry with Othniel Charles Marsh during the infamous Bone Wars. Curator Edward B. Daeschler is currently studying the evolution of Devonian tetrapods. He is a co-discoverer of the transitional "fishapod" Tiktaalik roseae from the Canadian Arctic and the discoverer of two tetrapods, Hynerpeton and Densignathus from the Catskill Formation in Pennsylvania.

Other collections

The Academy houses several collections of smaller size yet historical and scientific importance. The general invertebrate collection contains about 22,600 specimens, while the invertebrate paleontology collection contains about 105,000 lots. Both contain numerous type specimens. Generally, 21,500 specimens are gaunt, 13,500 are affiliated skins, and 1,700 are wet-preserved specimens.[26] The Frank J. Myers Rotifer Collection is the most comprehensive collection of rotifers on microslides. The herpetology collection contains about 40,000 specimens, including more than 500 type specimens. The mammalogy collection contains about 36,000 specimens and 180 holotypes. Among the naturalists and scientists associated with these collections are Timothy Conrad, Edward Drinker Cope, Richard Harlan, John Edwards Holbrook, William W. Jefferis, Henry Charles Lea, Isaac Lea, Joseph Leidy, Samuel George Morton, and Thomas Say.

Patrick Center for Environmental Research

Formerly the Limnology Department, the Patrick Center for Environmental Research focuses on applied ecology. Founded in 1947 by Ruth Patrick, formerly of the Diatom Herbarium, it was one of the earliest U.S. environmental consulting concerns. Its attachment to the Academy led it to become the first to employ interdisciplinary teams of scientists to study freshwater systems and the first to regard biodiversity as a central criterion of water quality.

Its 1948 biological survey of the Conestoga River Basin in Pennsylvania, a milestone in environmental research, led to similar surveys and studies throughout much of the United States.[citation needed] Characteristically, these earlier projects were joint projects of the Limnology Department and private industry. Since the rise of the environmental movement in the 1960s and 1970s and the resulting increases in governmental regulation of water pollution, the environmental assessments pioneered at the Academy are increasingly conducted by private environmental consulting firms.

As of 2013, much of the research at the Patrick Center is conducted with regulatory agencies and other governmental bodies, in fields such as diatom autecology,[27] environmental chemistry and toxicology, habitat restoration, long-term environmental trends, species conservation, and watershed management. Some of the work employs most of the center's expertise and capabilities, such as recent studies on the ecological effects of small dams or the ecological benefits of riparian reforestation.

Other studies may involve only one or a couple of the research programs. For example, a current project sampling sediment cores in tidal marshes throughout the Delaware Estuary.[28] This undertaking, possibly the most comprehensive core sampling in any estuary, relies extensively on the center's expertise in biogeochemistry and phycology. Once the sampling is completed, scientist will be able to investigate historical trends in marsh development, carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus cycling, water pollution, salinity variations, and climatic change by analysing the core's sediments, chemistry, and diatom assemblages.[citation needed]

Biogeochemistry

The Biogeochemistry Section of the Patrick Center is concerned with the influence of aquatic organisms on the sources, fate and transport of chemicals in aquatic systems. Studies frequently deal with the carbon and nutrient cycling as well as those of trace elements (e.g., lead, copper, mercury, and zinc) and organic contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The section regularly provides water, sediment and tissue analyses for government, intergovernmental agencies, and private companies from around the country. In addition to the sediment core project mentioned above, it has recently studied the effects of small dams on sediment contaminants, photochemical transformation of marsh-derived dissolved organic matter, and sedimentation and eutrophication in salt marshes.

Ecological Modeling

The Ecological Modeling Section employs sophisticated and rigorous mathematical modelling techniques to address a variety of questions in basic and applied research. Examples include watershed-scale modeling and risk assessment; nonlinear population models structured by age, body size, or space; particle transport in turbulent aquatic systems; and the ecology and control of exotic invasive plants in urban parks.

Fisheries

The Fisheries Section of the Patrick Center conducts research into the ecology, conservation, and management of lotic and estuarine fishes. Studies may range from the analysis of fish tissues for contaminants, monitoring fish populations for environmental assessments, to investigating the life histories of individual species. Recent and ongoing work include, glass eel (the larvae of freshwater or American eels) recruitment in the Delaware River basin, the ecology and genetics of bridal shiner (a fish that's endangered in Pennsylvania), and the impacts of flow management (dam releases) in the Upper Delaware River to native and introduced fish populations.

Macroinvertebrates

Benthic macroinvertebrates (primarily aquatic insects, crustaceans, and mollusks) are useful for biological monitoring programs. Their varied life spans, ranging from weeks to years, are long enough to reveal intermittent and continuous pollutants, yet short enough respond to worsening or improving water quality. The Macroinvertebrate Section at the Patrick Center has extensive experience in bioassessment, biomonitoring, and inventorying of freshwater habitats throughout the United States.

Phycology

Because of their great diversity and specific ecological requirements, algae, particularly diatoms, make excellent indicators of water quality. Moreover, diatoms are readily preserved in sediments, which make them useful organisms for studying paleolimnology (the long-term trends of streams and lakes). The Phycology Section of the Patrick Center provides algal analyses for governmental and other agencies interested in both assessing water quality and long-term environmental trends. One such undertaking is the analyses of diatom assemblages in lake sediments (sediment cores) throughout the eastern United States. This work, part of a large project managed by the EPA, will try to establish reference (pre-anthropogenic) conditions for lakes throughout the country.

In addition to these research efforts, the Phycology Section of the Patrick Center has developed a set of online resources for using algae in environmental research. These include an algal image database, autecology datasets for freshwater algae, algae research with the USGS National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program, and a diatom paleolimnology database.

Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Ecology

For most of its history, biological taxonomy and systematics were conducted using comparative morphology. In recent decades, however, advances in molecular biology and computational technologies have opened new possibilities for studying the diversity and history of life through the use of cladistics and computational phylogenetics. These technologies also offer new opportunities for molecular ecology and conservation genetics.

Academy scientists have been early adapters of molecular biology techniques. Allozymes, DNA-DNA hybridization, immunoelectrophoresis, restriction site analyses of mitochondrial DNA and serology were used extensively since the late 1960s. Recent molecular work mainly employs DNA sequencing, microsatellites, and AFLP (amplified fragment length polymorphism). In 2004, the Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Ecology (LMSE) was formed as a shared, multi-user facility to improve access to and provide training for the use of molecular data in systematic and ecological research. In addition to supporting staff, the lab offers research opportunities for students and post-doctoral fellowships.

Hovsgol

The Academy's work in Mongolia started with the realization of the unique research opportunities available at Lake Hovsgol (Hovsgol Nuur). This large lake and its watershed were remarkably pristine and relatively unknown, especially in comparison to its sister lake in Russia, Lake Baikal. In 1995, a multidisciplinary team of scientists from the Academy, as well as from other American institutions, Mongolia, Russia, and Japan started a multi-year study of the lake's biodiversity, limnology, and watershed.[29]

Although this research was scientifically rewarding, it was apparent that issues concerning environmental protection and sustainable economic development needed addressing.[30] Consequently, work at Hovsgol shifted to ecosystem studies and capacity building.[31] One early undertaking was the enhancement of the operational and physical infrastructure at Hovsgol National Park.[32] Long-term ecological monitoring of several tributary watersheds began in 1997 and soon the site would be adopted into the International Long Term Ecological Research Network.[33]

Recent work at Hovsgol is focusing on the consequences of and sustainable responses to climate change. The region lies in a transitional zone between the semi-arid Eurasian Steppe (grasslands) to the south and the Eurasian Taiga (boreal forest) to the north. As such, it is an ideal mid-continental site at which to monitor the ecological effects of climate change.[34] In addition, changes in livestock herding practices[35] raise concerns about overgrazing and desertification. In response, the team at Hovsgol created and distributed a Herder Handbook[36] and continues to conduct research and work with nomadic herders to develop sustainable practices.[37]

Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey

The Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey[38] is a multi-year biodiversity survey, environmental monitoring and capacity building project managed by Jon Gelhaus of the Academy's Entomology Department. A total of 217 sites from the Selenge River Basin, the most populous and most extensive drainage in Mongolia, were surveyed from 2003 to 2006. Most of these sites are in rivers or streams, but some are in freshwater and saltwater lakes, hot and cold springs, and marsh wetlands. Additional sites from the remote drainage systems in western Mongolia will be sampled in 2008.

The survey has yielded numerous new species and hundreds of geographic records for known aquatic insects, provided an extensive dataset for ongoing environmental monitoring, and has helped develop research and technical infrastructures in Mongolia. This capacity building includes, in collaboration with the Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology, the building of the first research laboratory in Mongolia dedicated to the study of aquatic invertebrates. It also includes training of Mongolian scientists and students.

Center for Environmental Policy

The Center for Environmental Policy informs and engages various constituents, promotes solutions, and builds public and professional awareness on important environmental topics. Much of its activities focus on public programs and working groups.

The center hosts or participates in a number of public programs that are free and open to the public. Urban Sustainability Forums feature panels of local and national experts discussing environmental and sustainability topics as they relate to the Philadelphia region. Town Square, which may feature a panel or an individual, addresses a variety of topics relating to the environment or public science. The center also hosts candidate forums, conferences and workshops.

The center acts as a logistical hub for a number of Working Groups organized around sustainability issues. Currently active groups include one for condominium and building co-op owners, a network of faith-based environmental groups, and a forum of senior executives in the private sector.

Ewell Sale Stewart Library

The Library and Archives were established at the Academy's founding meeting in 1812 for the purpose of supporting its natural science research. The library provides online access, services, collections, imaging, and shared resources with other libraries.[citation needed]

The library houses nearly 200,000 volumes ranging from works published in the 16th century to current journals and books. Its holdings also include illustrated works from as early as the 15th century, including Konrad Gessner's Historia animalium, Maria Sibylla Merian's Insects of Surinam, Edward Lear's Psittacidae or Parrots, and a double elephant folio of John James Audubon's The Birds of America.[39]

Scientific publications

The Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences was the first peer-reviewed publication in the United States devoted to the natural sciences. The first volume was published in 1817. By 1842, it had been superseded by the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences. The Proceedings have been published continuously since 1841. The Journal was reborn in 1847 as a larger-format publication that could accommodate longer articles and monographs. The last volume was issued in 1918.[40]

The Academy publishes three other series. The occasional series Notulae Naturae began in 1939 as a means to quickly publish short items, usually not longer than 16 pages on subject areas such as zoology, botany, ecology, geology and paleontology. The Monographs series, which began in 1935, is composed principally of larger systematic reviews of selected taxonomic groups. The Special Publications series, begun in 1922, includes works such as biography, taxonomy, historical reviews, and collections surveys.

VIREO

VIREO (VIsual REsource for Ornithology) is the most comprehensive collection of bird images in the world. Started in 1979, the collection contains over 180,000 photographs representing over 7,300 species.[41] The collection contains work by some of the world's most talented photographers.[41] VIREO licenses bird images for a wide variety of commercial and non-profit uses.[41]

Exhibits and public programs

Public exhibits

 
A mummy on display at the Academy

The Academy first opened its collections to the public in 1828. The popularity of its exhibits soared in 1868 with the debut of the world's first mounted dinosaur skeleton, Hadrosaurus. In fact, the size of the crowds flocking to this display prompted the Academy to relocate to its present-and roomier-location in 1876.

Collections and the public

As with most museums in the 19th century, there was little separation of the Academy's collections, which were vital to scientific work, and the public spaces. Not only did this subject the collections to extra wear and tear, but visitors were typically confronted with a bewildering assemblage of specimens with little in the way of supplemental information. Over time, however, museums such as the Academy started to showcase their more popular specimens while sequestering the bulk of the collections. In addition, they spent more effort interpreting their public displays. Museums started to play a more active role in educating the public.[42]

Dioramas

One expression of this transformation was the rise of that icon of natural history museums, the diorama. These three-dimensional displays were the virtual reality of their time, providing generations of museum visitors with their only opportunity to experience distant places and exotic wildlife.

In 1929 program coordinator Harold T. Green created The Academy's first diorama, depicting rocky mountain goats. Green's work was at first controversial amongst The Academy's staff, due to both the cost and accusations of sensationalism, but proved popular amongst the public. In 1935, the Works Progress Administration began providing artists to help work on the dioramas, fueling the exhibits' continued expansion.[43]

By presenting the wilderness to the public, dioramas nurtured an appreciation of our natural heritage, which, coincided with the growth of the Conservation Movement in the United States. The Academy currently has 37 dioramas, most of which were installed in the 1930s and 1940s.[44] They feature a variety of animals from Africa, Asia, and North America. Some of these, such as the caribou, lion, and plains zebra are familiar and relatively common, but others, such as the desert bighorn, kiang, Kodiak bear, panda, and passenger pigeon, are threatened, endangered, or extinct.

In 2018, under the management of Drexel University, The Academy undertook a high profile series of renovations on some of the older dioramas. These renovations were meant to increase the scientific accuracy of the displays and improve their aesthetics. [45]

Dinosaurs

 
A display of casts of the 35 bones of the Hadrosaurus

Another icon of natural history museums is the dinosaur skeleton. The first of these, the Hadrosaurus mount created by noted natural history artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, made its debut at the Academy in 1868. Hadrosaurus mounts also found their way into other public venues, including Princeton University, the Royal Scottish Museum, the Smithsonian, and the 1876 American Centennial Exposition. A special exhibit on the history of Hadrosaurus foulkii ran from November 22, 2008 to April 19, 2009.

 
A complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil cast on display with other dinosaur specimens.

A skeletal mount of a related dinosaur, Corythosaurus, served as the centerpiece of the Academy's "Hall of Earth History" during the middle of the 20th century. In 1986, the Academy opened a new exhibit, "Discovering Dinosaurs." This was the first large-scale exhibit to incorporate the findings of the "dinosaur renaissance." Instead of cold-blooded and lumbering reptiles, dinosaurs were conceived as active-and possibly warm-blooded-animals more akin to birds than reptiles.

In 1979, another type of dinosaur was the subject of an exhibition at the academy when it featured Jim Gary's Twentieth Century Dinosaurs and found that it was an enormous success with the public. This unconventional exhibition for a museum of science that featured contemporary sculpture, which focused upon the subjects of intense scientific inquiry, began a trend among its peer institutions, who then began to invite Gary and several other artists who specialized in scientific topics and subjects to museums that always had shied away from anything identified as "contemporary art" as exhibitions.[46]

Other exhibits

In 1979, the academy also opened "Outside-In", a hands-on children's nature museum. In 1995, it pioneered the hands-on simulation of a dinosaur dig, with its "The Big Dig". Other permanent exhibits include "Butterflies!", a live butterfly zoo, and "Science at the Academy", which showcases current Academy research.

The museum also has special, changing exhibits. Recent changing exhibits include "Amazon Voyage: Vicious Fishes and Other Riches", "Frogs: a Chorus of Colors", "The Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Exhibition", and "The Scoop on Poop: The Science of What Animals Leave Behind."

Public programs

Festivals

Four weekend festivals organized around scientific disciplines, are held during the year. Paleopalooza, held in mid-February, features fossil collections and talks by leading paleontologists. Earth Day Festival, held in mid-April, features scientists from the Academy's Patrick Center for Environmental Research. Bug Fest, held in mid August, features entomologists, insect collections and live insects. The Philadelphia Shell Show, held in mid-October, features an international shell market and competitive shell displays.

Programs for adults

The Academy began offering lectures to the public as early as the 1820s. Current offerings include natural history author talks, lectures by scientists, workshops and classes. In addition, the Center for Environmental Policy produces public programs on environmental issues.

Programs for families and children

Since its Nature Club in the 1930s, the Academy has offered programming just for children. Several programs appropriate for different age groups are currently offered. Safari Overnight sleepovers (camp-ins) are held on selected weekends during Fall, Winter, and Spring. Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts can participate in day workshops and sleepovers to fulfill badge and pin requirements. Tiny Tot Explorers is a program for toddlers. A new series of Family Workshops designed for both adults and children was launched in early 2010.

"Wild Weekends", held on selected weekends throughout the year, offer a variety of children's programs, including hands-on exploration of museum specimens, crafts and live animal shows with mammals, birds and reptiles. Live animal shows are also presented at regular times on other days and featured prominently in the educational programs.

Educational programs

Field trips and outreach

Field trips to the Academy are available throughout the year for schools, summer camps and other groups. Optional directed programs include Discovery Lessons for younger age groups (pre-K and higher) and Science Explorers for older children (grades 7 through 9). "Academy on the Go" is an educational outreach program that visits schools, camps, and community centers.

Women in Natural Sciences

WINS (Women in Natural Sciences) is an innovative and successful science enrichment program conducted by The Academy of Natural Sciences in collaboration with the School District of Philadelphia. Since its founding in 1982, WINS has been providing female public school students with hands-on science classes, scientific literacy and skill-building activities, and opportunities for personal growth in a uniquely nurturing setting.

Other programs

Academy Explorers Camp is a day camp program offered during Spring Break and the Summer. The George Washington Carver Science Fair is held in February or March. Science fair participants are eligible for the George Washington Carver Scholars summer program, which is also held at the Academy. Educator workshops are held throughout the year. The most recent series covered the integration of science and literacy skills. Self-guided workbooks tailored for younger children are available for some of the museum exhibits.

Awards and research opportunities

Hayden Memorial Geological Award

The Hayden Memorial Geological Award is given to prominent scientists working in geology or paleontology. It was established in 1888 in memory of Ferdinand V. Hayden, a distinguished American geologist and pioneering surveyor of the American West who had extensive ties to the Academy.

Gold Medal for Distinction in Natural History Art

Established in 1980, the Gold Medal for Distinction in Natural History Art is awarded to people whose artistic endeavors and life's work have contributed to our understanding and appreciation of living things.

The recipients as of 2015 are:[47]

Richard Hopper Day Memorial Medal

The Richard Hopper Day Memorial Medal, established in 1960 by his granddaughter, Margaret Day Dilks, is awarded in recognition of outstanding contributions in interpreting the natural sciences to the public. As of 2015, the recipients are:[47]

Joseph Leidy Award

The Joseph Leidy Award honors research in the natural sciences. It was established in 1923 as a tribute to the many contributions and long association of Joseph Leidy with the Academy.

Endowments and fellowships

The Böhlke Memorial Endowment Fund[51] honors the memory of James E. Böhlke and Eugenia B. Böhlke who were prominent ichthyologists at the Academy. This fund provides support for graduate students and recent postdoctoral researchers to work with the Ichthyology Collection and the Academy's Library.

The John J. & Anna H. Gallagher Fellowship[52] provides a unique opportunity for original, multi-year, postdoctoral or sabbatical research on the systematics of microscopic invertebrates, especially Rotifera. The research focus must be on systematics and may employ ecological, behavioral, physiological, molecular or developmental tools.

Jessup and McHenry Awards[53] are competitively awarded to students wishing to conduct studies at the postgraduate, doctoral and postdoctoral levels under the supervision or sponsorship of a member of the curatorial staff of the Academy. The Jessup Award is given for any specialty in which our curators have expertise. The McHenry Fund is restricted to botanists.

The Eckelberry Endowment[54] helps support the efforts of wildlife painters, sculptors, printmakers, and other artists to better acquaint themselves with the natural world through both museum and field research. In addition, artistic and scientific mentors counsel and assist these artists as their careers develop. One grant will be given each year.

Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU), a program of the National Science Foundation, provides summer research experience for students attending colleges and universities. Each summer the Academy offers five to ten separate research projects which can include collections, field, imaging and/or lab work. The projects vary but typically include environmental, library collections, and/or systematics research.

See also

References

Citations

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  2. ^ Wolf, Edwin (1976). At the Instance of Benjamin Franklin: A Brief History of the Library Company of Philadelphia, 1731-1976. The Library Company of Phil. ISBN 978-0-914076-73-5.
  3. ^ Justice, Benjamin (2008-02-01). ""The Great Contest": The American Philosophical Society Education Prize of 1795 and the Problem of American Education". American Journal of Education. 114 (2): 191–213. doi:10.1086/524315. ISSN 0195-6744. S2CID 145643821.
  4. ^ Nolan, Edward James (1909). A Short History of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Academy of Natural Sciences.
  5. ^ a b c "The Annals of Philosophy". Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy. 4 November 2017 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "The Academy of Natural Sciences and Drexel University Announce a Historic Affiliation". Academy of Natural Science. 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
  7. ^ Allen, Peter Van (2011-05-19). "Academy of Natural Sciences to become Drexel subsidiary". Philadelphia Business Journal. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
  8. ^ "William Bartram". amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  9. ^ "A Bitter Feud - The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University". ansp.org. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  10. ^ Porter, Charlotte M. (1979). "The Concussion of Revolution: Publications and Reform at the Early Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, 1812-1842". Journal of the History of Biology. 12 (2): 273–292. doi:10.1007/BF00124194. ISSN 0022-5010. JSTOR 4330745. S2CID 83784262.
  11. ^ Wamsley, Douglas W. (2017-01-01). ""We are Fully in the Expedition": Philadelphia's Support for the North Greenland Expeditions of Robert E. Peary, 1891‐1895". Geographical Review. 107 (1): 207–235. doi:10.1111/gere.12229. ISSN 0016-7428. S2CID 159645166.
  12. ^ "CHARLES-ALEXANDRE LESUEUR". faculty.evansville.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  13. ^ "William Maclure". www.usgs.gov. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  14. ^ "Titian Peale: Butterfly Preservation Hero - The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University". ansp.org. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  15. ^ "About the Collections". Drexel University -. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  16. ^ Distinctions between who is a naturalist and who is a scientist varies and can be elusive. One can make the distinction that naturalists are amateurs interested in the natural sciences, whereas scientists are professionals. This distinction, however, is confounded by history and circumstance. Most of the participants in American science during the 19th century were not professionals, although some of their contributions are of the highest order.
  17. ^ Joseph Leidy, the man who first studied Hadrosaurus, is considered the "father" of American paleontology and American Parasitology and was a leading teacher and authority on microscopy and comparative anatomy. He is widely regarded to have been the leading expert on the natural sciences during the 19th century. More about Leidy can be found on the Academy's online exhibit on Joseph Leidy 2008-04-14 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Moore, Gerry; Macklin, James; DeCesare, Lisa (2010). "A Brief History of Asa Gray's "Manual of Botany"". Harvard Papers in Botany. 15 (2): 277–286. doi:10.3100/025.015.0207. ISSN 1043-4534. JSTOR 41761698. S2CID 162816027.
  19. ^ a b c "Academy of Natural Sciences, Global Plants on JSTOR". plants.jstor.org. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  20. ^ a b c Pennell, Francis W. (1950). "Historic Botanical Collections of the American Philosophical Society and the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 94 (2): 137–151. ISSN 0003-049X. JSTOR 3143214.
  21. ^ Mears, James A. (1981). "Guide to Plant Collectors Represented in the Herbarium of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 133: 141–165. ISSN 0097-3157. JSTOR 4064771.
  22. ^ McCourt, Richard M.; Spamer, Earle E. (2004). Jefferson's Botanists: Lewis and Clark Discover the Plants of the West. Academy of Natural Sciences. ISBN 978-0-910006-59-0.
  23. ^ "Diatom Herbarium". Drexel University -. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  24. ^ Potapova, Marina (2010). "The ANSP Diatom Herbarium: an important resource for diatom research". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 160: 3–12. doi:10.1635/053.160.0102. ISSN 0097-3157. JSTOR 41446124. S2CID 85938212.
  25. ^ "Renovation and computerization of ANSP Diatom Herbarium | Projects - Diatoms of North America". diatoms.org. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  26. ^ "Mammalogy". Department of Vertebrate Zoology. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  27. ^ Autecology is the study the interaction of an individual organism or individual species with its physical, chemical and biological environment. Particulars may include such measures as temperature preferences, pollution tolerance, light requirements, and ability to recover after disturbance.
  28. ^ The Sediment Core work in the Delaware Estuary is being conducted in collaboration with the University of Delaware.
  29. ^ The findings of this research were published in Goulden, C.E. (2006). T. Sitnikova; J. Gelhaus; B. Boldgiv (eds.). The Geology, Biodiversity and Ecology of Lake Hövsgöl (Mongolia). Leiden: Backhuys Publ. ISBN 90-5782-162-1.
  30. ^ Mongolia, recently freed from Soviet domination, was experiencing severe economic disruption and increasing pressures through globalization to exploit its natural resources. Mongolians, committed to preserving their natural heritage, needed assistance in developing their scientific and conservation infrastructure.
  31. ^ Capacity building (the development of local expertise and infrastructure) is implemented in part through the inclusion of scientists and students from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences and the National University of Mongolia in research projects, conferences, and workshops. The Academy has also sponsored the training of Mongolian students in Philadelphia.
  32. ^ Hovsgol National Park, which includes the lake and its entire watershed, was created in 1992. Improvements took the form of improving park management, improving physical facilities, staff training and developing park-community relationships.
  33. ^ Long-term ecological work at Hovsgol has been supported by the Global Environmental Facility from 2002-2006.
  34. ^ Substantial increases in annual mean temperatures and growing season length in this semiarid landscape have resulted in permafrost loss, drier soils, and reduced plant cover in the steppe. Shifts in the seasonal pattern in precipitation are disruptive to grassland plant reproduction and the incidence of extreme weather also appears to be increasing. Changes in the forests are less demonstrable, but increased fire frequency and pest insect outbreaks are suggestive.
  35. ^ Traditional pastoralism, or animal herding, has existed in Mongolia for millennia, but recent trends in livestock production and practices may be unsustainable. The herds are larger and cashmere goats, which can be particularly damaging to vegetation, are accounting for a greater percentage of the total. Moreover, much of the traditional herder expertise was lost during the Soviet era. Consequently, herders risk seriously overgrazing the steppe, which, because of global warming, is increasingly vulnerable to desertification.
  36. ^ An English version of the Herder Handbook can be downloaded 2008-02-15 at the Wayback Machine from the Hovsgol Ecology website.
  37. ^ Current work at Hovsgol is funded by the National Science Foundation PIRE program, and is a partnership of the Academy's Asia Center, The University of Pennsylvania, the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, the Mongolian University of Science and Technology, and the National University of Mongolia. Information on earlier applied work at Hovsgol can be found at hovsgolecology.org.
  38. ^ "Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey: Splash". clade.ansp.org.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-21. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  40. ^ The volumes of the Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences published from 1817 to 1842 are referred to as the First Series. The Second Series was published from 1847 to 1918.
  41. ^ a b c "About VIREO". Visual Resources for Ornithology, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  42. ^ The Wagner Free Institute of Science is an early example of an organized public display of natural history collections. Founded in 1855 to offer free lectures on the natural sciences, the Wagner appointed Joseph Leidy in 1885 to organize its growing collections. Leidy's design is still largely intact, and the Wagner is effectively a museum of a museum.
  43. ^ "Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Exhibits Department records, 1852-2001". dla.library.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
  44. ^ "Dioramas". ansp.org. 2020-08-17. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
  45. ^ Belardo, Carolyn. "Dioramas Get Face-Lift". The Academy of Natural Sciences. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
  46. ^ Release, Tallahassee Museum. "Twentieth Century Dinosaurs Return to Tallahassee Museum".
  47. ^ a b "The Four Awards Bestowed by The Academy of Natural Sciences and Their Recipients". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 156 (1): 403–404. June 2007. doi:10.1635/0097-3157(2007)156[403:TFABBT]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 198160356.
  48. ^ "Gold Medal in Natural History Art". The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. 20 November 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  49. ^ . The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  50. ^ . The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University. Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-02-03. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-17. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  53. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-02-11. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-30. Retrieved 2008-03-24.

General bibliography

  • Goulden, C.E. (2006). T. Sitnikova; J. Gelhaus; B. Boldgiv (eds.). The Geology, Biodiversity and Ecology of Lake Hövsgöl (Mongolia). Leiden: Backhuys Publ. ISBN 90-5782-162-1.
  • McCready, Huston (1942). "Life with the Founders". Frontiers. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 6 (4): 121–125.
  • Nolan, Edward, J (1909). A short history of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences.
  • Peck, Robert, M. (October 1985). "The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia". Antiques: 741–754.
  • Peck, Robert, M. (2000). "To the Ends of the Earth for Science: Research Expeditions of the Academy of Natural Sciences: The First 150 Years, 1812-1962". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 150: 15–46.
  • Peck, Robert, M. (2012). A glorious enterprise : the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia and the making of American science. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.[permanent dead link]
  • Phillips, M.E. (1948). "A Brief History of Academy Publications". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 100: i–xl. JSTOR 4064412.
  • "The Four Awards Bestowed by The Academy of Natural Sciences and Their Recipients". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 156: 403–404. 2007. doi:10.1635/0097-3157(2007)156[403:TFABBT]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 198160356.
  • Spamer, E. E. (2000). "The legacy of 'friends of natural science': A systematic look at the scientific publications of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1817–2000". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 150: 3–13.
  • Stroud, P.T. (1997). "The Founding of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in 1812 and its journal in 1817". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences. 147: 227–236.
  • Thomas Peter, Bennett (1983). "The History of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia". Contributions to the History of North American Natural History. London: Society for the Bibliography of Natural History.

External links

  • Official website
  • Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University on Google Cultural Institute
  • "Hall of the Academy of Natural Sciences, 1860"
  • "Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

academy, natural, sciences, drexel, university, academy, natural, sciences, redirects, here, other, uses, academy, natural, sciences, disambiguation, formerly, academy, natural, sciences, philadelphia, oldest, natural, science, research, institution, museum, a. Academy of Natural Sciences redirects here For other uses see Academy of Natural Sciences disambiguation The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University formerly the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia is the oldest natural science research institution and museum in the Americas It was founded in 1812 by many of the leading naturalists of the young American republic with an expressed mission of the encouragement and cultivation of the sciences It has sponsored expeditions conducted original environmental and systematics research and amassed natural history collections containing more than 17 million specimens The Academy also organizes public exhibits and educational programs for both schools and the general public Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel UniversityLocation within PhiladelphiaEstablished1812Location1900 Benjamin Franklin ParkwayPhiladelphia Pennsylvania United StatesCoordinates39 57 25 N 75 10 17 W 39 9570 N 75 1714 W 39 9570 75 1714 Coordinates 39 57 25 N 75 10 17 W 39 9570 N 75 1714 W 39 9570 75 1714TypeNatural history museumCollection size17 million specimensPresidentScott Cooper PhDPublic transit accessSEPTA bus 32 33 Suburban StationWebsitewww ansp orgPennsylvania Historical MarkerOfficial nameAcademy of Natural SciencesTypeCityDesignatedMay 15 2013Location302 Market St Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Marker TextFounded nearby in 1812 it is the oldest natural science institution in the Americas It remains an invaluable resource for the study of life on Earth with outstanding exhibits and scientific collections Relocated to Logan Square in 1876 part of Drexel University since 2011 Contents 1 History 1 1 Notable members 2 Collections and research 2 1 Museum collections and research programs 2 1 1 Botany 2 1 2 Diatoms 2 1 3 Entomology 2 1 4 Ichthyology 2 1 5 Malacology 2 1 6 Ornithology 2 1 7 Vertebrate paleontology 2 1 8 Other collections 2 2 Patrick Center for Environmental Research 2 2 1 Biogeochemistry 2 2 2 Ecological Modeling 2 2 3 Fisheries 2 2 4 Macroinvertebrates 2 2 5 Phycology 2 3 Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Ecology 2 3 1 Hovsgol 2 3 2 Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey 2 4 Center for Environmental Policy 2 5 Ewell Sale Stewart Library 2 6 Scientific publications 2 7 VIREO 3 Exhibits and public programs 3 1 Public exhibits 3 1 1 Collections and the public 3 1 2 Dioramas 3 1 3 Dinosaurs 3 1 4 Other exhibits 3 2 Public programs 3 2 1 Festivals 3 2 2 Programs for adults 3 2 3 Programs for families and children 3 3 Educational programs 3 3 1 Field trips and outreach 3 3 2 Women in Natural Sciences 3 3 3 Other programs 4 Awards and research opportunities 4 1 Hayden Memorial Geological Award 4 2 Gold Medal for Distinction in Natural History Art 4 3 Richard Hopper Day Memorial Medal 4 4 Joseph Leidy Award 4 5 Endowments and fellowships 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 General bibliography 7 External linksHistory EditDuring the first decades of the United States Philadelphia was the cultural capital and one of the country s commercial centers 1 Two of the city s institutions the Library Company 2 and the American Philosophical Society 3 were centers of enlightened thought and scientific inquiry The increasing sophistication of the earth and life sciences combined with a growing awareness of the great variety of life and landscape in the American wilderness waiting to be discovered led a small group of naturalists to establish the Academy of Natural Sciences in the winter of 1812 4 The academy was meant to foster a gathering of fellow naturalists and nurture the growth and credibility of American science They frequently looked to their European counterparts for inspiration and expertise and longed to be regarded as equals On 25 April 1817 they were incorporated into the society under the title of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia by the legislature of Pennsylvania By 1 January 1818 eight members were published 5 In 2011 the Academy became affiliated with nearby Drexel University and changed its name to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University 6 7 Notable members Edit Within a decade of its founding the Academy became the undisputed center of natural sciences in the United States citation needed Academy members were frequently enlisted to participate in national surveys of the western territories and other major expeditions 5 Several of its earliest members including William Bartram 8 John Godman 9 Richard Harlan 10 Angelo Heilprin 11 Charles Alexandre Lesueur 12 William Maclure 13 Titian Peale 14 Charles Pickering Thomas Say and Alexander Wilson were among the pioneers or recognized authorities in their respective areas of study 15 Thomas Jefferson of Virginia John Edwards Holbrook of South Carolina Thomas Nuttall and Richard Owen of the United Kingdom Georges Cuvier of France and Alexander von Humboldt of Prussia were among the corresponding members members who lived far from Philadelphia of the Academy s first decades 5 Later during the 19th century other notable naturalists and scientists 16 including John James Audubon Charles S Boyer John Cassin Edward Drinker Cope Ezra Townsend Cresson Richard Harlan Ferdinand V Hayden Isaac Lea William W Jefferis John Lawrence LeConte Joseph Leidy 17 Samuel George Morton George Ord and James Rehn were members Corresponding members included Charles Darwin along with his supporters Asa Gray 18 and Thomas Henry Huxley For much of its history new members had to be nominated by two current members and then elected by the remaining members These requirements were dropped in 1924 Notable 20th century scientists include James Bohlke James Bond Henry Weed Fowler Ruth Patrick Henry Pilsbry H Radclyffe Roberts and Witmer Stone Collections and research EditThis section contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Academy of Natural Sciences holds an internationally important natural history collection Currently there are over 18 million biological specimens and hundreds of thousands of volumes journals illustrations photographs and archival items in its library These collections were obtained through multiple means including the donation or purchase of existing collections or individual items the collection activities of Academy sponsored expeditions or those of individual scientists whether or not they work at the Academy Some collections were originally gathered by other institutions For example a number of the natural history collections at the American Philosophical Society were relocated to the Academy by the end of the 19th century Traditionally researchers at natural science or natural history institutions such as the Academy engaged in biological taxonomy the science of discovering describing naming and classifying species In recent decades research has shifted in emphasis to the science of systematics the study of the evolutionary relationships among these species The Academy preserves many type specimens the reference material that helps establish a species identity They also preserve additional specimens with which scientists can investigate the nature of these species their relationships with other species their evolutionary history or their conservation status The Academy in 1912 Museum collections and research programs Edit The Academy s collections include a wide range of specimens across the tree of life The museum also maintains several historically important collections Botany Edit Botany is study of plants including nonvascular bryophytes mosses liverworts and hornworts and vascular plants including ferns conifers and flowering plants The field of botany has also traditionally included the study of algae lichens and fungi which are now classified in different biological kingdoms Collections at the Academy which are housed in the Philadelphia Herbarium PH the oldest institutional herbarium in the New World 19 include some of the oldest and most important botanical collections in the Americas 20 Notable early collectors include Benjamin Smith Barton Constatine Rafinesque Thomas Meehan Thomas Nuttall and Fredrick Pursh 20 21 Today the herbarium contains approximately 1 5 million specimens of vascular plants fungi lichens algae and fossil plants 40 000 of which are types 19 It also contains some special collections including the plants collected by Johann and Georg Forster during the voyages of Captain James Cook 20 and by Meriwether Lewis during the Lewis and Clark expedition Corps of Discovery 22 The department s current focus is plant biodiversity and evolution focusing on Apocynaceae milkweed or dogbane family and Polygalaceae 19 Diatoms Edit The Academy s Diatom Herbarium the largest in the Americas and the second largest in the world contains approximately 220 000 slides of these microscopic algae 23 The herbarium contains many specimens contributed by notable collectors a diversity of fossil diatoms and diatoms collected as part of numerous freshwater environmental surveys in the United States 24 The Diatom Herbarium also provides collections and taxonomic services for the Phycology Section of the Patrick Center for Environmental Research Former curators of note include Charles S Boyer Ruth Patrick and Charles Reimer 25 Entomology Edit Entomology has been important to the Academy since its founding Two of its earliest members include Thomas Say regarded as the father of American entomology and Titian Peale a leading natural history illustrator and the chief naturalist on the United States Exploring Expedition 1834 1842 The entomology collection currently contains more than 3 5 million specimens and includes the Titian Peale Moth and Butterfly Collection the oldest entomology collection in the United States Curator Emeritus Daniel Otte an expert on Orthoptera crickets grasshoppers and their relatives is a pioneer of presenting biological data on the internet through the creation of the Orthoptera Species File Curator and Entomology Department Chair Jon Gelhaus is a leading expert on crane flies and manages the Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey Ichthyology Edit Ichthyology has also been a part of Academy collections and research since its beginnings but the size of the collection was relatively modest until acquisition of Edward Drinker Cope s personal collections in 1898 A few years later Henry Weed Fowler began his tenure at the Academy during which he systematized the collections and described 1 408 species James E Bohlke William Saul and William Smith Vaniz are among the notable scientist who followed Fowler Curator Emeritus John Lundberg an expert in catfishes pioneered deep channel collecting in large tropical rivers and is the lead author of a seminal scientific paper on the biological and geographic history of the Amazon River Basin The Ichthyology collection which currently houses nearly 1 2 million specimens and nearly 3 000 types is one of the most important such collections in the United States The department also hosts the All Catfish Species Inventory a comprehensive online resource on catfish and Catfish Bones an online digital atlas of catfish morphology and is a participant in Neodat II an online resource of Neotropic ichthyology collections Malacology Edit Two of the early members of the Academy Thomas Say and Isaac Lea were malacologists see also conchologists R Tucker Abbott Samuel Stehman Haldeman Henry A Pilsbry and George W Tryon Jr were other noted malacologists who worked at the Academy The Academy s malacology collection is the oldest such collection in the United States and is the 3rd largest in the world It currently contains over 10 million specimens including types erected by more than 400 authors Curator Gary Rosenberg an expert on Jamaican land snails is a leader in digitised museum collections and research data Research websites include the Malacology Georeferencing Project an online database of Western Atlantic Marine Mollusca Malacolog and the OBIS Indo Pacific Mollusc database Research associate and former curator Daniel L Graf an expert on Unionidae freshwater mussels maintains the MUSSEL Project web site Ornithology Edit The majority of ornithologists active in the United States during the first half of the 19th century including Charles Lucien Bonaparte George Ord Titian Ramsay Peale John James Audubon John Cassin Thomas Nuttall and John Kirk Townsend were active members of the Academy Later notable Academy ornithologists include James Bond Frank Gill Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee Pete Myers Fred Sheldon and Witmer Stone With nearly 200 000 specimens representing over 9 000 species the Ornithology collection is one of the largest and most taxonomically complete bird collections in the world The Delaware Valley Ornithological Club DVOC has held regular meetings at the Academy since 1890 Vertebrate paleontology Edit A 43 ft 13 m complete fossil specimen of Mosasaur species Tylosaurus proriger with a human for scale is on display Vertebrate paleontology in the United States originated in Philadelphia through the efforts of naturalists and scientists associated with the American Philosophical Society APS during the first decade of the 19th century and at The Academy of Natural Sciences thereafter By the end of the 19th century the holdings from the APS including the Thomas Jefferson Fossil Collection had been transferred to the Academy for safekeeping Currently the collection contains more than 22 000 specimens including many types Richard Harlan was an early member who introduced many American naturalists to the groundbreaking works of Georges Cuvier Joseph Leidy who described Hadrosaurus and alerted the scientific world to the paleontological treasures of the American West is considered the father of American vertebrate paleontology Edward Drinker Cope who also worked extensively on other vertebrates is best known for his rivalry with Othniel Charles Marsh during the infamous Bone Wars Curator Edward B Daeschler is currently studying the evolution of Devonian tetrapods He is a co discoverer of the transitional fishapod Tiktaalik roseae from the Canadian Arctic and the discoverer of two tetrapods Hynerpeton and Densignathus from the Catskill Formation in Pennsylvania Other collections Edit The Academy houses several collections of smaller size yet historical and scientific importance The general invertebrate collection contains about 22 600 specimens while the invertebrate paleontology collection contains about 105 000 lots Both contain numerous type specimens Generally 21 500 specimens are gaunt 13 500 are affiliated skins and 1 700 are wet preserved specimens 26 The Frank J Myers Rotifer Collection is the most comprehensive collection of rotifers on microslides The herpetology collection contains about 40 000 specimens including more than 500 type specimens The mammalogy collection contains about 36 000 specimens and 180 holotypes Among the naturalists and scientists associated with these collections are Timothy Conrad Edward Drinker Cope Richard Harlan John Edwards Holbrook William W Jefferis Henry Charles Lea Isaac Lea Joseph Leidy Samuel George Morton and Thomas Say Patrick Center for Environmental Research Edit Formerly the Limnology Department the Patrick Center for Environmental Research focuses on applied ecology Founded in 1947 by Ruth Patrick formerly of the Diatom Herbarium it was one of the earliest U S environmental consulting concerns Its attachment to the Academy led it to become the first to employ interdisciplinary teams of scientists to study freshwater systems and the first to regard biodiversity as a central criterion of water quality Its 1948 biological survey of the Conestoga River Basin in Pennsylvania a milestone in environmental research led to similar surveys and studies throughout much of the United States citation needed Characteristically these earlier projects were joint projects of the Limnology Department and private industry Since the rise of the environmental movement in the 1960s and 1970s and the resulting increases in governmental regulation of water pollution the environmental assessments pioneered at the Academy are increasingly conducted by private environmental consulting firms As of 2013 update much of the research at the Patrick Center is conducted with regulatory agencies and other governmental bodies in fields such as diatom autecology 27 environmental chemistry and toxicology habitat restoration long term environmental trends species conservation and watershed management Some of the work employs most of the center s expertise and capabilities such as recent studies on the ecological effects of small dams or the ecological benefits of riparian reforestation Other studies may involve only one or a couple of the research programs For example a current project sampling sediment cores in tidal marshes throughout the Delaware Estuary 28 This undertaking possibly the most comprehensive core sampling in any estuary relies extensively on the center s expertise in biogeochemistry and phycology Once the sampling is completed scientist will be able to investigate historical trends in marsh development carbon nitrogen and phosphorus cycling water pollution salinity variations and climatic change by analysing the core s sediments chemistry and diatom assemblages citation needed Biogeochemistry Edit The Biogeochemistry Section of the Patrick Center is concerned with the influence of aquatic organisms on the sources fate and transport of chemicals in aquatic systems Studies frequently deal with the carbon and nutrient cycling as well as those of trace elements e g lead copper mercury and zinc and organic contaminants such as polychlorinated biphenyls PCBs and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons PAHs The section regularly provides water sediment and tissue analyses for government intergovernmental agencies and private companies from around the country In addition to the sediment core project mentioned above it has recently studied the effects of small dams on sediment contaminants photochemical transformation of marsh derived dissolved organic matter and sedimentation and eutrophication in salt marshes Ecological Modeling Edit The Ecological Modeling Section employs sophisticated and rigorous mathematical modelling techniques to address a variety of questions in basic and applied research Examples include watershed scale modeling and risk assessment nonlinear population models structured by age body size or space particle transport in turbulent aquatic systems and the ecology and control of exotic invasive plants in urban parks Fisheries Edit The Fisheries Section of the Patrick Center conducts research into the ecology conservation and management of lotic and estuarine fishes Studies may range from the analysis of fish tissues for contaminants monitoring fish populations for environmental assessments to investigating the life histories of individual species Recent and ongoing work include glass eel the larvae of freshwater or American eels recruitment in the Delaware River basin the ecology and genetics of bridal shiner a fish that s endangered in Pennsylvania and the impacts of flow management dam releases in the Upper Delaware River to native and introduced fish populations Macroinvertebrates Edit Benthic macroinvertebrates primarily aquatic insects crustaceans and mollusks are useful for biological monitoring programs Their varied life spans ranging from weeks to years are long enough to reveal intermittent and continuous pollutants yet short enough respond to worsening or improving water quality The Macroinvertebrate Section at the Patrick Center has extensive experience in bioassessment biomonitoring and inventorying of freshwater habitats throughout the United States Phycology Edit Because of their great diversity and specific ecological requirements algae particularly diatoms make excellent indicators of water quality Moreover diatoms are readily preserved in sediments which make them useful organisms for studying paleolimnology the long term trends of streams and lakes The Phycology Section of the Patrick Center provides algal analyses for governmental and other agencies interested in both assessing water quality and long term environmental trends One such undertaking is the analyses of diatom assemblages in lake sediments sediment cores throughout the eastern United States This work part of a large project managed by the EPA will try to establish reference pre anthropogenic conditions for lakes throughout the country In addition to these research efforts the Phycology Section of the Patrick Center has developed a set of online resources for using algae in environmental research These include an algal image database autecology datasets for freshwater algae algae research with the USGS National Water Quality Assessment NAWQA program and a diatom paleolimnology database Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Ecology Edit For most of its history biological taxonomy and systematics were conducted using comparative morphology In recent decades however advances in molecular biology and computational technologies have opened new possibilities for studying the diversity and history of life through the use of cladistics and computational phylogenetics These technologies also offer new opportunities for molecular ecology and conservation genetics Academy scientists have been early adapters of molecular biology techniques Allozymes DNA DNA hybridization immunoelectrophoresis restriction site analyses of mitochondrial DNA and serology were used extensively since the late 1960s Recent molecular work mainly employs DNA sequencing microsatellites and AFLP amplified fragment length polymorphism In 2004 the Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Ecology LMSE was formed as a shared multi user facility to improve access to and provide training for the use of molecular data in systematic and ecological research In addition to supporting staff the lab offers research opportunities for students and post doctoral fellowships Hovsgol Edit The Academy s work in Mongolia started with the realization of the unique research opportunities available at Lake Hovsgol Hovsgol Nuur This large lake and its watershed were remarkably pristine and relatively unknown especially in comparison to its sister lake in Russia Lake Baikal In 1995 a multidisciplinary team of scientists from the Academy as well as from other American institutions Mongolia Russia and Japan started a multi year study of the lake s biodiversity limnology and watershed 29 Although this research was scientifically rewarding it was apparent that issues concerning environmental protection and sustainable economic development needed addressing 30 Consequently work at Hovsgol shifted to ecosystem studies and capacity building 31 One early undertaking was the enhancement of the operational and physical infrastructure at Hovsgol National Park 32 Long term ecological monitoring of several tributary watersheds began in 1997 and soon the site would be adopted into the International Long Term Ecological Research Network 33 Recent work at Hovsgol is focusing on the consequences of and sustainable responses to climate change The region lies in a transitional zone between the semi arid Eurasian Steppe grasslands to the south and the Eurasian Taiga boreal forest to the north As such it is an ideal mid continental site at which to monitor the ecological effects of climate change 34 In addition changes in livestock herding practices 35 raise concerns about overgrazing and desertification In response the team at Hovsgol created and distributed a Herder Handbook 36 and continues to conduct research and work with nomadic herders to develop sustainable practices 37 Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey Edit The Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey 38 is a multi year biodiversity survey environmental monitoring and capacity building project managed by Jon Gelhaus of the Academy s Entomology Department A total of 217 sites from the Selenge River Basin the most populous and most extensive drainage in Mongolia were surveyed from 2003 to 2006 Most of these sites are in rivers or streams but some are in freshwater and saltwater lakes hot and cold springs and marsh wetlands Additional sites from the remote drainage systems in western Mongolia will be sampled in 2008 The survey has yielded numerous new species and hundreds of geographic records for known aquatic insects provided an extensive dataset for ongoing environmental monitoring and has helped develop research and technical infrastructures in Mongolia This capacity building includes in collaboration with the Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology the building of the first research laboratory in Mongolia dedicated to the study of aquatic invertebrates It also includes training of Mongolian scientists and students Center for Environmental Policy Edit The Center for Environmental Policy informs and engages various constituents promotes solutions and builds public and professional awareness on important environmental topics Much of its activities focus on public programs and working groups The center hosts or participates in a number of public programs that are free and open to the public Urban Sustainability Forums feature panels of local and national experts discussing environmental and sustainability topics as they relate to the Philadelphia region Town Square which may feature a panel or an individual addresses a variety of topics relating to the environment or public science The center also hosts candidate forums conferences and workshops The center acts as a logistical hub for a number of Working Groups organized around sustainability issues Currently active groups include one for condominium and building co op owners a network of faith based environmental groups and a forum of senior executives in the private sector Ewell Sale Stewart Library Edit The Library and Archives were established at the Academy s founding meeting in 1812 for the purpose of supporting its natural science research The library provides online access services collections imaging and shared resources with other libraries citation needed The library houses nearly 200 000 volumes ranging from works published in the 16th century to current journals and books Its holdings also include illustrated works from as early as the 15th century including Konrad Gessner s Historia animalium Maria Sibylla Merian s Insects of Surinam Edward Lear s Psittacidae or Parrots and a double elephant folio of John James Audubon s The Birds of America 39 Scientific publications Edit The Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences was the first peer reviewed publication in the United States devoted to the natural sciences The first volume was published in 1817 By 1842 it had been superseded by the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences The Proceedings have been published continuously since 1841 The Journal was reborn in 1847 as a larger format publication that could accommodate longer articles and monographs The last volume was issued in 1918 40 The Academy publishes three other series The occasional series Notulae Naturae began in 1939 as a means to quickly publish short items usually not longer than 16 pages on subject areas such as zoology botany ecology geology and paleontology The Monographs series which began in 1935 is composed principally of larger systematic reviews of selected taxonomic groups The Special Publications series begun in 1922 includes works such as biography taxonomy historical reviews and collections surveys VIREO Edit This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message VIREO VIsual REsource for Ornithology is the most comprehensive collection of bird images in the world Started in 1979 the collection contains over 180 000 photographs representing over 7 300 species 41 The collection contains work by some of the world s most talented photographers 41 VIREO licenses bird images for a wide variety of commercial and non profit uses 41 Exhibits and public programs EditPublic exhibits Edit A mummy on display at the Academy The Academy first opened its collections to the public in 1828 The popularity of its exhibits soared in 1868 with the debut of the world s first mounted dinosaur skeleton Hadrosaurus In fact the size of the crowds flocking to this display prompted the Academy to relocate to its present and roomier location in 1876 Collections and the public Edit As with most museums in the 19th century there was little separation of the Academy s collections which were vital to scientific work and the public spaces Not only did this subject the collections to extra wear and tear but visitors were typically confronted with a bewildering assemblage of specimens with little in the way of supplemental information Over time however museums such as the Academy started to showcase their more popular specimens while sequestering the bulk of the collections In addition they spent more effort interpreting their public displays Museums started to play a more active role in educating the public 42 Dioramas Edit One expression of this transformation was the rise of that icon of natural history museums the diorama These three dimensional displays were the virtual reality of their time providing generations of museum visitors with their only opportunity to experience distant places and exotic wildlife In 1929 program coordinator Harold T Green created The Academy s first diorama depicting rocky mountain goats Green s work was at first controversial amongst The Academy s staff due to both the cost and accusations of sensationalism but proved popular amongst the public In 1935 the Works Progress Administration began providing artists to help work on the dioramas fueling the exhibits continued expansion 43 By presenting the wilderness to the public dioramas nurtured an appreciation of our natural heritage which coincided with the growth of the Conservation Movement in the United States The Academy currently has 37 dioramas most of which were installed in the 1930s and 1940s 44 They feature a variety of animals from Africa Asia and North America Some of these such as the caribou lion and plains zebra are familiar and relatively common but others such as the desert bighorn kiang Kodiak bear panda and passenger pigeon are threatened endangered or extinct In 2018 under the management of Drexel University The Academy undertook a high profile series of renovations on some of the older dioramas These renovations were meant to increase the scientific accuracy of the displays and improve their aesthetics 45 Dinosaurs Edit A display of casts of the 35 bones of the Hadrosaurus Another icon of natural history museums is the dinosaur skeleton The first of these the Hadrosaurus mount created by noted natural history artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins made its debut at the Academy in 1868 Hadrosaurus mounts also found their way into other public venues including Princeton University the Royal Scottish Museum the Smithsonian and the 1876 American Centennial Exposition A special exhibit on the history of Hadrosaurus foulkii ran from November 22 2008 to April 19 2009 A complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil cast on display with other dinosaur specimens A skeletal mount of a related dinosaur Corythosaurus served as the centerpiece of the Academy s Hall of Earth History during the middle of the 20th century In 1986 the Academy opened a new exhibit Discovering Dinosaurs This was the first large scale exhibit to incorporate the findings of the dinosaur renaissance Instead of cold blooded and lumbering reptiles dinosaurs were conceived as active and possibly warm blooded animals more akin to birds than reptiles In 1979 another type of dinosaur was the subject of an exhibition at the academy when it featured Jim Gary s Twentieth Century Dinosaurs and found that it was an enormous success with the public This unconventional exhibition for a museum of science that featured contemporary sculpture which focused upon the subjects of intense scientific inquiry began a trend among its peer institutions who then began to invite Gary and several other artists who specialized in scientific topics and subjects to museums that always had shied away from anything identified as contemporary art as exhibitions 46 Other exhibits Edit In 1979 the academy also opened Outside In a hands on children s nature museum In 1995 it pioneered the hands on simulation of a dinosaur dig with its The Big Dig Other permanent exhibits include Butterflies a live butterfly zoo and Science at the Academy which showcases current Academy research The museum also has special changing exhibits Recent changing exhibits include Amazon Voyage Vicious Fishes and Other Riches Frogs a Chorus of Colors The Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Exhibition and The Scoop on Poop The Science of What Animals Leave Behind Public programs Edit Festivals Edit Four weekend festivals organized around scientific disciplines are held during the year Paleopalooza held in mid February features fossil collections and talks by leading paleontologists Earth Day Festival held in mid April features scientists from the Academy s Patrick Center for Environmental Research Bug Fest held in mid August features entomologists insect collections and live insects The Philadelphia Shell Show held in mid October features an international shell market and competitive shell displays Programs for adults Edit The Academy began offering lectures to the public as early as the 1820s Current offerings include natural history author talks lectures by scientists workshops and classes In addition the Center for Environmental Policy produces public programs on environmental issues Programs for families and children Edit Since its Nature Club in the 1930s the Academy has offered programming just for children Several programs appropriate for different age groups are currently offered Safari Overnight sleepovers camp ins are held on selected weekends during Fall Winter and Spring Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts can participate in day workshops and sleepovers to fulfill badge and pin requirements Tiny Tot Explorers is a program for toddlers A new series of Family Workshops designed for both adults and children was launched in early 2010 Wild Weekends held on selected weekends throughout the year offer a variety of children s programs including hands on exploration of museum specimens crafts and live animal shows with mammals birds and reptiles Live animal shows are also presented at regular times on other days and featured prominently in the educational programs Educational programs Edit Field trips and outreach Edit Field trips to the Academy are available throughout the year for schools summer camps and other groups Optional directed programs include Discovery Lessons for younger age groups pre K and higher and Science Explorers for older children grades 7 through 9 Academy on the Go is an educational outreach program that visits schools camps and community centers Women in Natural Sciences Edit WINS Women in Natural Sciences is an innovative and successful science enrichment program conducted by The Academy of Natural Sciences in collaboration with the School District of Philadelphia Since its founding in 1982 WINS has been providing female public school students with hands on science classes scientific literacy and skill building activities and opportunities for personal growth in a uniquely nurturing setting Other programs Edit Academy Explorers Camp is a day camp program offered during Spring Break and the Summer The George Washington Carver Science Fair is held in February or March Science fair participants are eligible for the George Washington Carver Scholars summer program which is also held at the Academy Educator workshops are held throughout the year The most recent series covered the integration of science and literacy skills Self guided workbooks tailored for younger children are available for some of the museum exhibits Awards and research opportunities EditHayden Memorial Geological Award Edit The Hayden Memorial Geological Award is given to prominent scientists working in geology or paleontology It was established in 1888 in memory of Ferdinand V Hayden a distinguished American geologist and pioneering surveyor of the American West who had extensive ties to the Academy Gold Medal for Distinction in Natural History Art Edit Established in 1980 the Gold Medal for Distinction in Natural History Art is awarded to people whose artistic endeavors and life s work have contributed to our understanding and appreciation of living things The recipients as of 2015 update are 47 1980 Roger Tory Peterson 1981 Ansel Adams 1982 Sir Peter Scott 1983 Eliot Porter 1984 Peter Matthiessen 1987 BBC Natural History Unit 1992 William Cooper 1995 Guy Tudor 2005 John McPhee 2007 Ray Troll 2012 James Prosek 48 49 Richard Hopper Day Memorial Medal Edit The Richard Hopper Day Memorial Medal established in 1960 by his granddaughter Margaret Day Dilks is awarded in recognition of outstanding contributions in interpreting the natural sciences to the public As of 2015 update the recipients are 47 1960 Jacques Piccard Lawrence A Shumaker Don Walsh Andreas Rechnitzer 1964 L S B Leakey 1966 H Bradford Washburn 1967 Charles A Berry 1969 Ruth Patrick 1973 Harrison H Schmitt 1979 Stanton A Waterman 1980 Crawford H Greenewalt 1983 David Attenborough 1985 Lewis Thomas 1988 Gerald Durrell 1991 Robert McCracken Peck 1997 Stephen Ambrose 2000 Thomas Lovejoy 2004 Sylvia Earle 2010 Scott Weidensaul 50 Joseph Leidy Award Edit The Joseph Leidy Award honors research in the natural sciences It was established in 1923 as a tribute to the many contributions and long association of Joseph Leidy with the Academy Endowments and fellowships Edit The Bohlke Memorial Endowment Fund 51 honors the memory of James E Bohlke and Eugenia B Bohlke who were prominent ichthyologists at the Academy This fund provides support for graduate students and recent postdoctoral researchers to work with the Ichthyology Collection and the Academy s Library The John J amp Anna H Gallagher Fellowship 52 provides a unique opportunity for original multi year postdoctoral or sabbatical research on the systematics of microscopic invertebrates especially Rotifera The research focus must be on systematics and may employ ecological behavioral physiological molecular or developmental tools Jessup and McHenry Awards 53 are competitively awarded to students wishing to conduct studies at the postgraduate doctoral and postdoctoral levels under the supervision or sponsorship of a member of the curatorial staff of the Academy The Jessup Award is given for any specialty in which our curators have expertise The McHenry Fund is restricted to botanists The Eckelberry Endowment 54 helps support the efforts of wildlife painters sculptors printmakers and other artists to better acquaint themselves with the natural world through both museum and field research In addition artistic and scientific mentors counsel and assist these artists as their careers develop One grant will be given each year Research Experience for Undergraduates REU a program of the National Science Foundation provides summer research experience for students attending colleges and universities Each summer the Academy offers five to ten separate research projects which can include collections field imaging and or lab work The projects vary but typically include environmental library collections and or systematics research See also EditAcademy Glacier Greenland American Philosophical Society The first learned society in the Americas and an important scientific and cultural institution in Philadelphia Drexel University The Philadelphia based university with which the Academy is now affiliated Franklin Institute Another Philadelphia science museum Library Company of Philadelphia The mother of all subscription libraries the Library Company was founded in 1731 List of natural history museums List of natural history museums in the United States Logan Square A landmark adjacent to the Academy that contains the Swann Memorial Fountain Please Touch Museum a children s museum that was housed within the Academy before moving in 1981 Wagner Free Institute of Science A museum of a museum a Victorian era Natural History museum located in Philadelphia Witmer StoneReferences EditCitations Edit Kornfeld Eve 1984 Crisis in the Capital The Cultural Significance of Philadelphia s Great Yellow Fever Epidemic Pennsylvania History A Journal of Mid Atlantic Studies 51 3 189 205 ISSN 0031 4528 JSTOR 27772983 PMID 11620405 Wolf Edwin 1976 At the Instance of Benjamin Franklin A Brief History of the Library Company of Philadelphia 1731 1976 The Library Company of Phil ISBN 978 0 914076 73 5 Justice Benjamin 2008 02 01 The Great Contest The American Philosophical Society Education Prize of 1795 and the Problem of American Education American Journal of Education 114 2 191 213 doi 10 1086 524315 ISSN 0195 6744 S2CID 145643821 Nolan Edward James 1909 A Short History of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences a b c The Annals of Philosophy Baldwin Cradock and Joy 4 November 2017 via Google Books The Academy of Natural Sciences and Drexel University Announce a Historic Affiliation Academy of Natural Science 2011 Retrieved 2011 10 24 Allen Peter Van 2011 05 19 Academy of Natural Sciences to become Drexel subsidiary Philadelphia Business Journal Retrieved 2011 10 24 William Bartram amphilsoc org Retrieved 2020 07 31 A Bitter Feud The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University ansp org Retrieved 2020 07 31 Porter Charlotte M 1979 The Concussion of Revolution Publications and Reform at the Early Academy of Natural Sciences Philadelphia 1812 1842 Journal of the History of Biology 12 2 273 292 doi 10 1007 BF00124194 ISSN 0022 5010 JSTOR 4330745 S2CID 83784262 Wamsley Douglas W 2017 01 01 We are Fully in the Expedition Philadelphia s Support for the North Greenland Expeditions of Robert E Peary 1891 1895 Geographical Review 107 1 207 235 doi 10 1111 gere 12229 ISSN 0016 7428 S2CID 159645166 CHARLES ALEXANDRE LESUEUR faculty evansville edu Retrieved 2020 07 31 William Maclure www usgs gov Retrieved 2020 07 31 Titian Peale Butterfly Preservation Hero The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University ansp org Retrieved 2020 07 31 About the Collections Drexel University Retrieved 2020 07 31 Distinctions between who is a naturalist and who is a scientist varies and can be elusive One can make the distinction that naturalists are amateurs interested in the natural sciences whereas scientists are professionals This distinction however is confounded by history and circumstance Most of the participants in American science during the 19th century were not professionals although some of their contributions are of the highest order Joseph Leidy the man who first studied Hadrosaurus is considered the father of American paleontology and American Parasitology and was a leading teacher and authority on microscopy and comparative anatomy He is widely regarded to have been the leading expert on the natural sciences during the 19th century More about Leidy can be found on the Academy s online exhibit on Joseph Leidy Archived 2008 04 14 at the Wayback Machine Moore Gerry Macklin James DeCesare Lisa 2010 A Brief History of Asa Gray s Manual of Botany Harvard Papers in Botany 15 2 277 286 doi 10 3100 025 015 0207 ISSN 1043 4534 JSTOR 41761698 S2CID 162816027 a b c Academy of Natural Sciences Global Plants on JSTOR plants jstor org Retrieved 2020 07 31 a b c Pennell Francis W 1950 Historic Botanical Collections of the American Philosophical Society and the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 94 2 137 151 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 3143214 Mears James A 1981 Guide to Plant Collectors Represented in the Herbarium of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 133 141 165 ISSN 0097 3157 JSTOR 4064771 McCourt Richard M Spamer Earle E 2004 Jefferson s Botanists Lewis and Clark Discover the Plants of the West Academy of Natural Sciences ISBN 978 0 910006 59 0 Diatom Herbarium Drexel University Retrieved 2020 07 31 Potapova Marina 2010 The ANSP Diatom Herbarium an important resource for diatom research Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 160 3 12 doi 10 1635 053 160 0102 ISSN 0097 3157 JSTOR 41446124 S2CID 85938212 Renovation and computerization of ANSP Diatom Herbarium Projects Diatoms of North America diatoms org Retrieved 2020 07 31 Mammalogy Department of Vertebrate Zoology Retrieved 5 December 2013 Autecology is the study the interaction of an individual organism or individual species with its physical chemical and biological environment Particulars may include such measures as temperature preferences pollution tolerance light requirements and ability to recover after disturbance The Sediment Core work in the Delaware Estuary is being conducted in collaboration with the University of Delaware The findings of this research were published in Goulden C E 2006 T Sitnikova J Gelhaus B Boldgiv eds The Geology Biodiversity and Ecology of Lake Hovsgol Mongolia Leiden Backhuys Publ ISBN 90 5782 162 1 Mongolia recently freed from Soviet domination was experiencing severe economic disruption and increasing pressures through globalization to exploit its natural resources Mongolians committed to preserving their natural heritage needed assistance in developing their scientific and conservation infrastructure Capacity building the development of local expertise and infrastructure is implemented in part through the inclusion of scientists and students from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences and the National University of Mongolia in research projects conferences and workshops The Academy has also sponsored the training of Mongolian students in Philadelphia Hovsgol National Park which includes the lake and its entire watershed was created in 1992 Improvements took the form of improving park management improving physical facilities staff training and developing park community relationships Long term ecological work at Hovsgol has been supported by the Global Environmental Facility from 2002 2006 Substantial increases in annual mean temperatures and growing season length in this semiarid landscape have resulted in permafrost loss drier soils and reduced plant cover in the steppe Shifts in the seasonal pattern in precipitation are disruptive to grassland plant reproduction and the incidence of extreme weather also appears to be increasing Changes in the forests are less demonstrable but increased fire frequency and pest insect outbreaks are suggestive Traditional pastoralism or animal herding has existed in Mongolia for millennia but recent trends in livestock production and practices may be unsustainable The herds are larger and cashmere goats which can be particularly damaging to vegetation are accounting for a greater percentage of the total Moreover much of the traditional herder expertise was lost during the Soviet era Consequently herders risk seriously overgrazing the steppe which because of global warming is increasingly vulnerable to desertification An English version of the Herder Handbook can be downloaded Archived 2008 02 15 at the Wayback Machine from the Hovsgol Ecology website Current work at Hovsgol is funded by the National Science Foundation PIRE program and is a partnership of the Academy s Asia Center The University of Pennsylvania the Mongolian Academy of Sciences the Mongolian University of Science and Technology and the National University of Mongolia Information on earlier applied work at Hovsgol can be found at hovsgolecology org Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey Splash clade ansp org Academy of Natural Sciences Thomas Jefferson Fossil Collection Archived from the original on 2008 04 21 Retrieved 2008 03 24 The volumes of the Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences published from 1817 to 1842 are referred to as the First Series The Second Series was published from 1847 to 1918 a b c About VIREO Visual Resources for Ornithology Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University Retrieved 23 November 2020 The Wagner Free Institute of Science is an early example of an organized public display of natural history collections Founded in 1855 to offer free lectures on the natural sciences the Wagner appointed Joseph Leidy in 1885 to organize its growing collections Leidy s design is still largely intact and the Wagner is effectively a museum of a museum Academy of Natural Sciences Philadelphia Exhibits Department records 1852 2001 dla library upenn edu Retrieved 2021 07 14 Dioramas ansp org 2020 08 17 Retrieved 2021 07 14 Belardo Carolyn Dioramas Get Face Lift The Academy of Natural Sciences Retrieved 2021 07 14 Release Tallahassee Museum Twentieth Century Dinosaurs Return to Tallahassee Museum a b The Four Awards Bestowed by The Academy of Natural Sciences and Their Recipients Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 156 1 403 404 June 2007 doi 10 1635 0097 3157 2007 156 403 TFABBT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 198160356 Gold Medal in Natural History Art The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University 20 November 2012 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Prosek to Receive Award The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University Archived from the original on 2015 04 18 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Making Science Accessible The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University Archived from the original on 2015 04 18 Retrieved 18 April 2015 Bohlke Memorial Endowment Fund Archived from the original on 2008 02 03 Retrieved 2008 03 24 John J amp Anna H Gallagher Fellowship Archived from the original on 2008 04 17 Retrieved 2008 03 24 Jessup and McHenry Awards Archived from the original on 2008 02 11 Retrieved 2008 03 24 Eckelberry Endowment Archived from the original on 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2008 03 24 General bibliography Edit Goulden C E 2006 T Sitnikova J Gelhaus B Boldgiv eds The Geology Biodiversity and Ecology of Lake Hovsgol Mongolia Leiden Backhuys Publ ISBN 90 5782 162 1 McCready Huston 1942 Life with the Founders Frontiers Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 6 4 121 125 Nolan Edward J 1909 A short history of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences Peck Robert M October 1985 The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Antiques 741 754 Peck Robert M 2000 To the Ends of the Earth for Science Research Expeditions of the Academy of Natural Sciences The First 150 Years 1812 1962 Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 150 15 46 Peck Robert M 2012 A glorious enterprise the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia and the making of American science Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press permanent dead link Phillips M E 1948 A Brief History of Academy Publications Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 100 i xl JSTOR 4064412 The Four Awards Bestowed by The Academy of Natural Sciences and Their Recipients Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 156 403 404 2007 doi 10 1635 0097 3157 2007 156 403 TFABBT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 198160356 Spamer E E 2000 The legacy of friends of natural science A systematic look at the scientific publications of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1817 2000 Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 150 3 13 Stroud P T 1997 The Founding of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in 1812 and its journal in 1817 Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences 147 227 236 Thomas Peter Bennett 1983 The History of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Contributions to the History of North American Natural History London Society for the Bibliography of Natural History External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Academy of Natural Sciences Wikisource has the text of the 1921 Collier s Encyclopedia article Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences Official website Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University on Google Cultural Institute Hall of the Academy of Natural Sciences 1860 Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University amp oldid 1136931648 Scientific publications, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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