4th International Conference on Open RepositoriesThis presentation was part of the session : Conference PostersHundreds of thousands of specimens in herbaria and natural history museums worldwide are potential candidates for digitization, making them more accessible to researchers. An herbarium contains collections of preserved plant specimens created for scientific use. Herbarium specimens are ideal natural history objects for digitization, as the plants are pressed flat and dried, and mounted on individual sheets of paper, creating a nearly two-dimensional object. Building digital repositories of herbarium specimens can increase use and exposure of the collections while simultaneously reducing physical handling. As important as the digiti...
The need to increase global accessibility to specimens while preserving the physical specimens by re...
The present work is a contribution towards accelerating the digitisation process of natural history ...
Digitisation programmes in many institutes frequently involve disparate and irregular funding, diver...
Hebaria are biological collections of preserved plants, algae, fungi and lichens used for scientific...
Computational workflow environments are an active area of computer science and informatics research;...
At present many herbaria and musea around the globe are digitising their natural history collections...
More and more herbaria are digitising their collections. Images of specimens are made available onli...
Over the past years, herbarium collections worldwide have started to digitize millions of specimens ...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Digitisation of specimens at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has created nearly half a mil...
Specimens or objects in natural history collections hold substantial research and cultural value tha...
The Natural History Museum, London (NHM) has embarked on an ambitious Digital Collections Programme ...
The New York Botanical Garden Herbarium has been databasing and imaging its estimated 7.3 million pl...
There are more than 1.2 billion biological specimens in the world's museums and herbaria. These obje...
A key limiting factor in organising and using information from physical specimens curated in natural...
The need to increase global accessibility to specimens while preserving the physical specimens by re...
The present work is a contribution towards accelerating the digitisation process of natural history ...
Digitisation programmes in many institutes frequently involve disparate and irregular funding, diver...
Hebaria are biological collections of preserved plants, algae, fungi and lichens used for scientific...
Computational workflow environments are an active area of computer science and informatics research;...
At present many herbaria and musea around the globe are digitising their natural history collections...
More and more herbaria are digitising their collections. Images of specimens are made available onli...
Over the past years, herbarium collections worldwide have started to digitize millions of specimens ...
Herbaria around the world house millions of plant specimens; botanists and other researchers value t...
Digitisation of specimens at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has created nearly half a mil...
Specimens or objects in natural history collections hold substantial research and cultural value tha...
The Natural History Museum, London (NHM) has embarked on an ambitious Digital Collections Programme ...
The New York Botanical Garden Herbarium has been databasing and imaging its estimated 7.3 million pl...
There are more than 1.2 billion biological specimens in the world's museums and herbaria. These obje...
A key limiting factor in organising and using information from physical specimens curated in natural...
The need to increase global accessibility to specimens while preserving the physical specimens by re...
The present work is a contribution towards accelerating the digitisation process of natural history ...
Digitisation programmes in many institutes frequently involve disparate and irregular funding, diver...