| Literature DB >> 29104435 |
Vladimir Blagoderov1,2, Malcolm Penn2, Mike Sadka2, Adrian Hine3,2, Stephen Brooks2, Darrell J Siebert2, Chris Sleep2, Steve Cafferty2, Elisa Cane2, Geoff Martin2, Flavia Toloni2, Peter Wing2, John Chainey2, Liz Duffell2, Rob Huxley2, Sophie Ledger2, Caitlin McLaughlin2, Gerardo Mazzetta2, Jasmin Perera2, Robyn Crowther2, Lyndsey Douglas2, Joanna Durant2, Martin Honey2, Blanca Huertas2, Theresa Howard2, Victoria Carter2, Sara Albuquerque2, Gordon Paterson2, Ian J Kitching2.
Abstract
The Natural History Museum, London (NHMUK) has embarked on an ambitious programme to digitise its collections. The first phase of this programme was to undertake a series of pilot projects to develop the workflows and infrastructure needed to support mass digitisation of very large scientific collections. This paper presents the results of one of the pilot projects - iCollections. This project digitised all the lepidopteran specimens usually considered as butterflies, 181,545 specimens representing 89 species from the British Isles and Ireland. The data digitised includes, species name, georeferenced location, collector and collection date - the what, where, who and when of specimen data. In addition, a digital image of each specimen was taken. A previous paper explained the way the data were obtained and the background to the collections that made up the project. The present paper describes the technical, logistical, and economic aspects of managing the project.Entities:
Keywords: Digitisation; collection; database; georeferencing; museum; sites; workflow
Year: 2017 PMID: 29104435 PMCID: PMC5665009 DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.5.e19893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodivers Data J ISSN: 1314-2828