Paleo Digitization Working Group

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The Paleo Digitization Working Group was inspired by the paleo digitization workshop held in New Haven, CT in conjunction with the Yale Peabody Museum, 23-25 September 2013. The focus of the group is to examine issues and create community-generated documentation related to the digitization of paleontology collections

iDigBio's Digitization Resources Wiki Home

Sign up for the Paleo Digitization Listserv (IDIGBIOPALDIGI-L)

Resource: IDIGBIOPALDIGI-L@LISTS.UFL.EDU
Purpose: This working group's goals are to support paleo digitization efforts.
Subscribe:To add yourself to the list, email listserv@lists.ufl.edu with the following command in the email: subscribe IDIGBIOPALDIGI-L first_name last_name
Example: subscribe IDIGBIOPALDIGI-L Jane Doe

Twitter

For meeting and other related announcements via Twitter
Follow @iDigGilnelson

Working Group Webinar Meeting Place

NOTE: All webinars are recorded and Power Points converted to PDF and deposited on the wiki for later viewing and download.

2016 Webinars

  • 12 January 2016, 3-4 p.m. EST: Federal Collections Discussion Session, Kathy Hollis, Smithsonian Institution
  • 9 February 2016, 3-4 p.m. EST: Federal Collections Discussion Session, part 2, Kathy Hollis, Smithsonian Institution
  • 9 March 2016, 3-4 p.m. EST: Makerspace and 3D Printing, Dana Ehret, University of Alabama
  • 23 March 2016, 3-4 p.m. EDT: Digitizing Small Paleo Collections, Laura Vietti, University of Wyoming
  • 13 April 2016, 3-4 p.m. EDT: ePANDDA: Enhancing Paleontological and Neontological Data Discovery API, Jocelyn Sessa, American Museum of Natural History

2015 Webinars

2014 Webinars

2013 Webinars

Recordings of working group meetings

Paleo Digitization Workshops

Standard Views for Fossil Images

Stratigraphy Resources

Controlled Vocabularies

Related Media

  • Formed in Stone: The Natural Beauty of Fossils A YouTube video from Sam Noble, contributed by Roger Burkhalter, that accompanies an exhibit of large-scale images of various fossils taken with the museum's macrophotography setup. The video goes from collecting, to preparation, to blackening and whitening of the fossil, then photography using image stacking.