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Curation and Conservation of Columbia University Fossil Invertebrate Collection at the AMNH, Summer 2024 (A Pilot Project)

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Columbia University Collection -  Curation and Conservation - 2024 Week 1 Hi, my name is Makena Hatch! I am a third-year student at Colorado College studying Geology and concentrating my studies in Organismal Biology and Ecology. In doing so, I am hoping to gain an understanding not only of deep time, but also of ecological and human time. My interests lie at the intersection of marine science and geoscience, making the opportunity to conserve and curate f ossil marine invertebrates for AMNH a perfect fit for me! (Pictures are of my love for rocks through the years...) Hi! I'm Corra Lewis. I'm a rising sophomore at Colorado College majoring in geology. When I was little, I spent so much time wandering around museums and reading every plaque until my mom would have to drag me out. I am so excited to get the opportunity to work at the American Museum of Natural History and am glad to be helping with the Columbia University Collection. Hello, my name is Elizabeth, I am from Birmi

Echinoderm Project 2023 - Week 7 and 8

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 Lena here. We said goodbye to Emory and Mohan after that last post, but since I stayed for a couple more weeks, we figured we should do a final post. I've been finishing up the labeling and final touches in our cabinets and cleaning as many new drawers as I can before I leave. Here is a before and after of one of those drawers: Cabinet 1292 Drawer 8 Before Cabinet 1292 Drawer 8 After As we come to a close, it is satisfying to be able to see all our hard work completed, with clean, organized and cataloged cabinets. One of our finished cabinets, complete with specimen labels, drawer labels, and a full list off all families and genus' in the cabinet (attached to the door) On Mohan and Emory's last day, Bushra and Hilary threw a little going away party. It was very nice to be able to hang with some of the wonderful people we've met while being here. We also received some great gifts from Hilary. We each received a AMNH bag as well as a sticker and pin. Honestly, I was alre

Echinoderm project 2023 -Week 6

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The final week is here, and it’s x-rays galore! But before that, the end of last week was also big. That’s because the amazing Christine Siddoway was in town and stopped by to visit. I (Mohan) and Emory both have her to thank that we are here at all– she’s the one who put this amazing opportunity out on the Colorado College campus. We celebrated her visit with a New York classic: Pizza! (Chicago style.) We also took a quick walk into Central Park to admire the view. No, not the city skyline– the rocks! We found a metamorphic outcrop by a pond with awesome foliations from when it cooled long ago deep within the earth, and pronounced striations raked over it by glaciers in the last glacial maximum thousands of years ago. The fossils we’re preparing may come from all over the world, but our walk in Central Park reminded us that there’s amazing natural history right here in Manhattan as well! It's a rock! (courtesy Christine Siddoway) This week we finished up the cleaning, photographi

Echinoderm Project 2023 - Week 5

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  This week we began to finish up this project as next week will be our last to work on it. While we spent our time finishing up data entry and taking our last pictures of the specimens, we also selected specimens for what will be taking up the majority of our last week, cat-scanning them. This week we had the opportunity to tour the invertebrate zoology dry collection, led by Christine Johnson, a Curatorial Associate. We started with a coral collection from the 1800s. This collection and the room it is housed in recently received a complete overhaul. The room was renovated to support healthier conditions for the specimens as well as placing them in brand new cabinets. The specimens were cleaned, sorted, and labeled, much like the work we are doing now. This beautifully organized collection gave us a peek into what the future of our collection will look like and how important the work that we're doing is. One cabinet in the coral collection Next, we got to see the entomology collec

Echinoderm Project 2023 - Week 4

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This week, we gained a new member to the project. Susan Mac Low is from Davis, California and previously worked as a knitting instructor. She enjoys working with concrete objects and tools. Her experience in this area includes woodwork, origami, knitting, and electronics. She is interested in medicine, engineering, and fiber arts, and wants to become a lab tech in the future. Susan adding labels to specimens This week, we continued our work on cleaning and re-housing echinoderm specimens. We also continued to input the fossils into the museums database, as well as taking photographs, and attaching the images to the fossils within the database. This Monday, we were lucky to learn how to do scientific illustrations by a science illustrator, Patricia Wynn. We learned to measure and follow the proportions of the specimen to begin the sketch, then to add some detail, and how to transfer the sketch using tracing paper. We look forward to practicing the skills she taught us and finishing our