4 posts categorized "Birds"

February 09, 2011

New on Galaxy of Images ... For Wild Bird Feeding Month

This plate from John James Audubon's The birds of America: from drawings made in the United States and their territories, 1840-1844 depicts the Hudsonian Godwit, or Limosa haemastica. As you might suspect, they tend to breed near the Hudson Bay, as well as farther north in Canada and even as far as Alaska, and then migrating to South America.

A Hudsonian Godwit in Rio Grande, Rio Gande do Sul, Brazil, by Cláudio Dias Timm from Rio Grande do Sul.

Audubon's drawing of the female is very close to bird in this recent photograph.

—Elizabeth Periale

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March 31, 2010

I know why the caged bird sings.

Howard Fogg, Revised encyclopedia of caged birds…, 1928, Woodcut showing the family tree of canaries -all varieties coming from the wild canary

Howard Fogg, Revised encyclopedia of caged birds . . . , 1928, Woodcut showing the family tree of canaries -all varieties coming from the wild canary.

The Anacostia Community Museum Library and the Anthropology Library located in the National Museum of Natural History both have Maya Angelou's autobiography, I know why the caged bird sings.

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March 05, 2010

Parachute Invented by Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo-parachute-1
Leonardo-parachute-2Leonardo da Vinci diagrammed one of the first parachutes designed in the late 15th century.

Since Leonardo da Vinci was a well-known polymath, artist, and engineer, many reference questions about him have come to the The Museum Studies & Reference Library (MS&RL) reference desk over the years. 

The Museum Studies & Reference Library (MS&RL) collection is strong in museum studies, including publications produced to accompany exhibitions. MS&RL also serves the general reference needs of the Smithsonian Institution, and contains basic and “classical” books on an eclectic range of subjects.

“As the world’s largest and most complex museum, the Smithsonian Institution is a leader in the growth and advancement of museum studies theory and practice. The museum studies literature collection is one of the mechanisms  that enables the Smithsonian Institution to perform this task. The Smithsonian Institution museum studies collection is unique to the museum profession. The Smithsonian Institution holds the most comprehensive collection of historic and contemporary literature worldwide. No other organization or university has anything that comes close in scope or depth. These materials have served as the basis for the creation  of numerous important books and journal articles  that are influencing the shape of the museum field today.”—Nancy Fuller, Smithsonian Center for Education and Museum Studies

The Libraries currently has 277 books and manuscripts by, or about, Leonardo da Vinci held in eight of our libraries: The Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, MS&RL, National Air & Space Museum LibraryNational Museum of American History Library, National Museum of Natural History Library (Birds), Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum Library, Smithsonian American Art/National Portrait Gallery Library, and the Smithsonian Institution Libraries Research Annex.

One online exhibition to see:  Baylor University, Mayborn Museum Complex, Leonardo da Vinci . . . Experience the genius of Leonardo da Vinci through forty machines based on his visionary designs.

For more on the history of the parachute.—Amy Levin

Image: Leonardo Da Vinci: experience, experiment and design, Martin Kemp.

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April 25, 2009

Happy Cuckoo Day

He was but as the cuckoo is in June,
Heard, not regarded.
—William Shakespeare


"Plate 165: Le Coucou de Mindenao," François-Nicolas Martinet, Ornithologie [Histoire des Oiseaux Peints dans Tous Leurs Aspects Apparents et Sensibles] [Ornithology], 1773-1792

The cuckoo who is on to himself is halfway out of the clock.
—Wilson Mizner


"Black-billed Cuckoo," Howard Jones, Illustrations of the nests and eggs of birds of Ohio, 1879-1886

This is the weather the cuckoo likes
And so do I.
—Thomas Hardy


"Plate 54: Le Coucou," François-Nicolas Martinet, Ornithologie [Histoire des Oiseaux Peints dans Tous Leurs Aspects Apparents et Sensibles] [Ornithology], 1773-1792


—Elizabeth Periale

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