Florissant fossil beds ranks among the best documented Cenozoic fossil deposits in the world in number of scientific publications and named species. The history of geoscience research on the Upper Eocene Florissant Formation spans nearly one and a half centuries. New excavations and transfers of historic collections have spread Florissant fossils to nearly 30 natural history museums during that period. The history of acquisition, conservation, and taxonomic study of each museum's collection is unique, so Florissant collections provide examples of how taxonomic diversity, physical conservation, and public exhibition of collections vary with provenance. Dispersal of fossils among museums, including separation of type specimen parts and counterparts, has led to a variety of challenges for research on Florissant fossils. First, an exploratory, quantitative analysis of taxonomic diversity in four collections of fossil insects from Florissant uncovers a pattern of identification bias. Some taxonomists preferentially identify common taxa or consistently misidentify rare taxa, for instance. In light of this result, it is recommended that researchers vet any set of identifications made by multiple researchers or, ideally, identify specimens anew. Second, observations of Florissant specimens at different museums show that a large number of fossils have been lost, damaged, or destroyed due to actions such as travel on loan, display in exhibits, or application of non-archival conservation techniques. Through the digitization process, including cataloging and imaging specimens, curatorial staffs have discovered the extent of uncatalogued or missing material. Digitization has mitigated some of the challenges associated with dispersion of specimens. Collaborative projects across museums have led to rediscovery of lost specimens or discovery for the first time of parts and counterparts that correspond to the same fossil but are housed at different institutions. Online databases that serve specimen images allow researchers to assign new taxonomic determinations, controlling for bias from earlier researchers, or to examine fossils remotely from photographs, reducing the need to handle and ship fragile material for loans. Moreover, providing public access to museum specimen records through collaborative digitization projects expands the opportunities to exhibit and develop specimen-based educational curricula.
...MoreBook Gary D. Rosenberg; Renee M. Clary (2018) Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making.
Chapter
Warren D. Allmon;
Gregory P. Dietl;
Jonathan R. Hendricks;
Robert M. Ross;
(2018)
Bridging the two fossil records: Paleontology’s “big data” future resides in museum collections
(/isis/citation/CBB301778497/)
Chapter
Bruce S. Lieberman;
Julien Kimmig;
(2018)
Museums, paleontology, and a biodiversity science–based approach
(/isis/citation/CBB045609940/)
Article
Mohr, Barbara A. R.;
(2009)
A Truly European Forest: A Historic Lower Silesian Palaeobotanical Collection (Late Cretaceous) at the Museum of Natural History (Berlin)
(/isis/citation/CBB000932614/)
Chapter
Stefano Dominici;
Elisabetta Cioppi;
(2018)
All is not lost: History from fossils and catalogues at the Museum of Natural History, University of Florence
(/isis/citation/CBB784047995/)
Chapter
Jere H. Lipps;
(2018)
Natural history museums: Facilitating science literacy across the globe
(/isis/citation/CBB596989597/)
Book
Gary D. Rosenberg;
Renee M. Clary;
(2018)
Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making
(/isis/citation/CBB681993207/)
Chapter
Ashley J. Inglehart;
(2018)
Filippo Buonanni and the Kircher Museum
(/isis/citation/CBB074439858/)
Chapter
Gary D. Rosenberg;
Renee M. Clary;
(2018)
Something to be said for natural history museums
(/isis/citation/CBB572800194/)
Article
Laura Colli;
Antonella Salvini;
Elena Pecchioni;
Sandra Cencetti;
(2017)
Conservation of Paleontological Finds: the Restoration Materials of the “Problematica Verrucana”
(/isis/citation/CBB575061092/)
Chapter
Renee M. Clary;
Amy Moe-Hoffman;
(2018)
The role of the Dunn-Seiler Museum, Mississippi State University, in promoting public geoliteracy
(/isis/citation/CBB257602494/)
Chapter
Dallas C. Evans;
(2018)
The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis: A history of leveraging field expeditions and lab work to enhance public engagement
(/isis/citation/CBB006119368/)
Chapter
Patricia Coorough Burke;
Peter M. Sheehan;
(2018)
Museums at the intersection of science and citizen: An example from a Silurian reef
(/isis/citation/CBB571400487/)
Chapter
Alan E. Leviton;
Michele L. Aldrich;
(2018)
Geology and paleontology at the California Academy of Sciences, 1895-2016: A brief overview
(/isis/citation/CBB744201777/)
Chapter
J.C. Aubele;
L.S. Crumpler;
(2018)
Twenty-first-century natural history: Planetary geology in natural history museums
(/isis/citation/CBB197122498/)
Article
Joseph H. Hartman;
(2020)
The importance of the museum in antebellum U.S. western territorial exploration: understanding the relevance of collecting fossils and their conservation to solving long-standing geologic and paleontologic problems - Part 1
(/isis/citation/CBB014367344/)
Article
Joseph H. Hartman;
(2021)
The importance of the museum in antebellum U.S. Western Territorial exploration: Part 2. The roles of Hayden and Meek in a paradigm shift in geologic and paleontologic studies
(/isis/citation/CBB328483331/)
Article
Elena Canadelli;
(2016)
Marble Busts and Fish Fossils: The Catalog of the Museum of naturalia and artificialia at the University of Padua (1797)
(/isis/citation/CBB561990879/)
Article
Volkan Sarıgül;
(2021)
A short history of paleontology in Turkey, Part II: Paleontology in the Republic of Turkey
(/isis/citation/CBB163695996/)
Book
Dingus, Lowell;
Norell, Mark A.;
(2010)
Barnum Brown: The Man Who Discovered Tyrannosaurus Rex
(/isis/citation/CBB001023269/)
Book
Francesco Luzzini;
(2013)
Il miracolo inutile. Antonio Vallisneri e le scienze della Terra in Europa tra XVII e XVIII secolo
(/isis/citation/CBB451473673/)
Be the first to comment!