Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility

German-speaking naturalists working in southeastern Australia in the mid-19th century relied heavily on the expertise of First Nations intermediaries who acted as guides, collectors, traders and translators (Clarke 2008, Olsen and Russell 2019). Many of these naturalists went to Australia because of...

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Published in:Biodiversity Information Science and Standards
Main Authors: Schwarz,Anja, Möhrle,Fiona, von Mering,Sabine
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.111980
https://biss.pensoft.net/article/111980/
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spelling ftpensoft:10.3897/biss.7.111980 2023-10-01T03:55:59+02:00 Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility Schwarz,Anja Möhrle,Fiona von Mering,Sabine 2023 text/html https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.111980 https://biss.pensoft.net/article/111980/ en eng Pensoft Publishers info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/eissn/2535-0897 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC BY 4.0 Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7: e111980 Australia’s First Nations CARE principle colonial collections FAIR data Indigenous knowledge knowledge transfer natural history collections Wikidata Conference Abstract 2023 ftpensoft https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.111980 2023-09-05T00:06:33Z German-speaking naturalists working in southeastern Australia in the mid-19th century relied heavily on the expertise of First Nations intermediaries who acted as guides, collectors, traders and translators (Clarke 2008, Olsen and Russell 2019). Many of these naturalists went to Australia because of the research opportunities offered by the British Empire at a time when the German nation states did not have colonies of their own. Others sought to escape political upheaval at home. They were welcome employees for colonial government agencies due to their training in the emerging research-oriented natural sciences that the reformed German universities offered at a time when British universities were still providing a broad general education (Home 1995, Kirchberger 2000).Wilhelm von Blandowski (1822–1878 ) and Gerard Krefft (1830–1881 ), who both worked in colonial Victoria and New South Wales, are among this group. Throughout their work, they corresponded extensively with naturalists in Berlin, exchanging specimens and ideas. But the preserved Australian animals, plants and rock samples, as well as the written and drawn records of animals and landscapes now held at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (MfN), are much more than objects of scientific interest. They also contain information about Australia's First Nations. The collections provide evidence of their role in collecting as well as their knowledge of the natural world, which has long been overlooked and, at least in part deliberately, made invisible by Western knowledge systems (e.g., Das and Lowe 2018, Ashby 2020).People data have been recognised as crucial for linking such collection objects with expeditions, publications, archival material and correspondence (Groom et al. 2020, Groom et al. 2022). It can thus potentially help reconstruct invisibilized Indigenous histories and knowledge. However, while the MfN keeps information about European collectors and other non-indigenous agents associated with their specimens in internal catalogues, databases and ... Conference Object First Nations Pensoft Publishers Lowe ENVELOPE(-30.309,-30.309,-80.537,-80.537) Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7
institution Open Polar
collection Pensoft Publishers
op_collection_id ftpensoft
language English
topic Australia’s First Nations
CARE principle
colonial collections
FAIR data
Indigenous knowledge
knowledge transfer
natural history collections
Wikidata
spellingShingle Australia’s First Nations
CARE principle
colonial collections
FAIR data
Indigenous knowledge
knowledge transfer
natural history collections
Wikidata
Schwarz,Anja
Möhrle,Fiona
von Mering,Sabine
Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
topic_facet Australia’s First Nations
CARE principle
colonial collections
FAIR data
Indigenous knowledge
knowledge transfer
natural history collections
Wikidata
description German-speaking naturalists working in southeastern Australia in the mid-19th century relied heavily on the expertise of First Nations intermediaries who acted as guides, collectors, traders and translators (Clarke 2008, Olsen and Russell 2019). Many of these naturalists went to Australia because of the research opportunities offered by the British Empire at a time when the German nation states did not have colonies of their own. Others sought to escape political upheaval at home. They were welcome employees for colonial government agencies due to their training in the emerging research-oriented natural sciences that the reformed German universities offered at a time when British universities were still providing a broad general education (Home 1995, Kirchberger 2000).Wilhelm von Blandowski (1822–1878 ) and Gerard Krefft (1830–1881 ), who both worked in colonial Victoria and New South Wales, are among this group. Throughout their work, they corresponded extensively with naturalists in Berlin, exchanging specimens and ideas. But the preserved Australian animals, plants and rock samples, as well as the written and drawn records of animals and landscapes now held at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (MfN), are much more than objects of scientific interest. They also contain information about Australia's First Nations. The collections provide evidence of their role in collecting as well as their knowledge of the natural world, which has long been overlooked and, at least in part deliberately, made invisible by Western knowledge systems (e.g., Das and Lowe 2018, Ashby 2020).People data have been recognised as crucial for linking such collection objects with expeditions, publications, archival material and correspondence (Groom et al. 2020, Groom et al. 2022). It can thus potentially help reconstruct invisibilized Indigenous histories and knowledge. However, while the MfN keeps information about European collectors and other non-indigenous agents associated with their specimens in internal catalogues, databases and ...
format Conference Object
author Schwarz,Anja
Möhrle,Fiona
von Mering,Sabine
author_facet Schwarz,Anja
Möhrle,Fiona
von Mering,Sabine
author_sort Schwarz,Anja
title Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
title_short Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
title_full Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
title_fullStr Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
title_full_unstemmed Collections from Colonial Australia in Berlin's Museum für Naturkunde and the Challenges of Data Accessibility
title_sort collections from colonial australia in berlin's museum für naturkunde and the challenges of data accessibility
publisher Pensoft Publishers
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.7.111980
https://biss.pensoft.net/article/111980/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-30.309,-30.309,-80.537,-80.537)
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genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 7: e111980
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