Showing posts with label washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label washington. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Sensing a bit of Husky pride...

Posted by: Julia Swan


The sun is shining (for now), cherry blossoms are blooming, and Washington Huskies, past and present, are flooding the UW campus. This weekend is the biggest showcase of University of Washington achievements of the entire year—Washington Weekend. Just about every campus department has something exciting going on! Check out the schedule for a full listing of events.

Of course, the Burke Museum is eager to get in on the fun. We’ve decided to offer free admission to all UW alumni and their families for the whole weekend (Friday-Sunday). So for all those UW alum out there who miss the perks of being a student, this is the perfect time to come visit the museum for free! All you need to do is bring your Alumni Association membership to the front desk.

We’ve also got a major event happening Saturday here at the museum. The Plateau Native Arts Celebration is going on from 10 am – 4 pm. We are bringing nine distinguished artists from the Yakama, Cayuse, and Nez Perce nations to demonstrate their crafts. If you liked what you saw in Peoples of the Plateau or This Place Called Home , then this is the perfect opportunity to witness the living arts of the Plateau region. And if you haven’t yet seen these two wonderful exhibits, why not come when you can meet practicing artists in person?



I’ve got my fingers crossed that the nice weather persists and that we have lots of sun for Washington Weekend. Come see the UW campus in all its glory, and while you’re at it, check out the Plateau Native Arts Celebration.

- Julia

Photo by Storms Photographic.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Wilderness Conference coming up

Posted by: Rebecca Whitham

How do we preserve wilderness for future generations in a world where environmental and social change is occurring more rapidly than ever?

If you are interested in meeting the many people who have created and protected the wilderness areas of this region or if you want to learn more about how change impacts local wildlife, you should check out the 2008 Wilderness Conference, April 3 – 5.

From sessions on global warming, to bridging political divides through environmentalism, to indigenous perspectives on wilderness, there’s a lot to take from this event.

Of special interest to Burke fans:

Steven Kazlowski, the photographer behind the Burke’s upcoming exhibit The Last Polar Bear, will be there signing books with publishers The Mountaineers Books. Stephen Brown, editor of Arctic Wings, on which the Burke’s upcoming fall photography exhibit of the same name is based, will be featured as the Saturday night Banquet Speaker.

Details on registering can be found online at the conference home page. It’s not too late to register and there are some affordable options.

A number of the Burke staff will be attending the kickoff event on Thurs., April 3 at Kane Hall on the UW campus – a presentation by award winning photo-journalist Gary Braasch, author of Earth Under Fire: How Global Warming is Changing the World. See you there!

- Rebecca

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Museum Without Walls (MWW)

Posted by: Julia Swan
Hello museum lovers, this is Julia, the Outreach Assistant at the Burke Museum. I’m a new voice to the Burke Blog and I’m really excited to be writing for it, so I figure it is appropriate that my first post is about a project I’m working on just beyond the doors of the Burke that also excites me.

I tend to wear a lot of hats around here. When I’m not helping plan student outreach events, attending campus resource fairs, or writing press releases, I moonlight as a museology graduate student. As a student, one of the projects I’ve become involved in is the University District Museum Without Walls.

What on earth is a Museum Without Walls you might ask? Well it’s hard to define precisely, but it is essentially a way to share the unique and dynamic history and culture of the University District without staying confined to a single building or location. If you’re still feeling confused, here are some examples of upcoming MWW projects:

  • In the fall of 2008, MWW is installing a temporary exhibit (location TBD) that tells the story of
    activism in the University District. Check out the blog (yes, I contribute to the blogosphere in many ways) for a Picture of the Week feature that highlights activism in the neighborhood.
  • In 2009, MWW will help the University of Washington celebrate the centennial of the Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exposition by commissioning new sculptures that commemorate the AYPE.
  • MWW will be installing historic photographs on billboards throughout the neighborhood, as well as distributing collectible cards that feature notable people, places, and events in the history of the University District.

So keep your eyes and ears open for updates on the University District Museum Without Walls project. In the meantime, keep coming to the museums with walls, like the Burke Museum and the Henry Art Gallery here at the UW!

I’m looking forward to my next post!

- Julia

Photo: Pottery Booth at U-District Street Fair, by Bob Miller, 1971. Courtesy of the Museum of History and Industry, Seattle Post-Intelligencer Collection.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

The Maker's Story

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin

If you missed the interview on KUOW yesterday, follow that link to hear This Place Called Home co-curator Miles R. Miller (Yakama/Nez Perce) talking with Sound Focus host Megan Sukys about the stories of the Plateau and the cultural differences across the Cascades. (The interview starts at around the 14 minute mark into the program from 1/29.)

The Plateau exhibits opened this weekend with a wonderful members’ reception on Friday night:

I'll be back soon with photos from the public opening this past Saturday.

- Rebecca

Thursday, January 24, 2008

"In Progress"

Posted by: Karyn Gregory

One of my colleagues (and friends) in the Museology department has a show opening up this weekend at the Burke: This Place Called Home (along with the traveling exhibit Peoples of the Plateau). He's been working on curating this show nonstop since last Fall. The exhibit installation is finally finished and I managed to sneak in earlier this week and take some photos of the process to give readers a taste of what to expect. It looks...stunning. Hard to believe this is the same space the Y2Y and Giant Squid exhibits were in.

I'm so proud of Miles!

- Karyn

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Who gets to tell the story?

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin

I was cautious when I first heard that with our upcoming Peoples of the Plateau exhibit, we were going to display the turn of the century photographs of Native American subjects taken by a white man who felt he was documenting a “vanishing” race. In this Sunday’s thoughtful Pacific Northwest Magazine cover story found in the Seattle Times, art critic Sheila Farr mines this same apprehension, and with insight from Roberta Conner (director of the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute, Pendleton, OR) and Steven Grafe (curator of the traveling exhibit), comes to some very helpful conclusions for anyone who plans to see the exhibit and decide for themselves what is the significance of these images to our understanding of history.

Acknowledging the colonialist overtones in his practice, Farr and Grafe still give credit to Moorhouse for his progressive habit of recording the names of people and places in his photographs, an effort not often seen in the work of his contemporaries. Not only do these identifications make the photographs more useful as a historic document, but they also imply that the subjects are real people and places, not just stereotypes and romanticized landscapes.

At the Burke, we’re balancing the Moorhouse presentation with an exhibit of Plateau objects from our own collection. Titled This Place Called Home, the companion exhibit presents the story of the same Native American subjects, but in their own voices, as told through their cultural materials and taped interviews.

I’m excited to see the shows open this weekend and compare the stories the two shows are telling. Will This Place Called Home serve as a test of sorts for the authenticity of the images in Peoples of the Plateau? And how will the historic photos in Peoples of the Plateau inform the context with which we look at the cultural materials in This Place Called Home?

As always, I'd love to hear your thoughts. The exhibit opens to the public this Sat., Jan. 26.

- Rebecca

Photo: Dr. Whirlwind, Cayuse Tribe, circa 1905, photograph by Lee Moorhouse. From Division of Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Library System. On view in Peoples of the Plateau, Burke Museum, Seattle, Jan. 26 – June 8, 2008.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Plateau Close-up

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Last week I joined the curatorial team for an object photo shoot behind-the-scenes in our Ethnology collections lab. We’re gearing up for the January opening of two shows that look at Plateau Arts & Culture: Peoples of the Plateau (historic photography) and This Place Called Home (cultural materials from the Burke’s Plateau collections).

This Place Called Home guest curator Miles R. Miller (Yakama) is a beadwork artist inspired by the traditional motifs of the Plateau region. He’s pictured here along with a selection of objects from the exhibit, including a stunning buckskin coat (capote) with beaded details, a cradle board, and two hats that showcase two approaches to a similar motif.

These will be the first exhibits to celebrate Eastern Washington Plateau culture at the Burke in over 20 years. Many of the objects will be on exhibit for the first time ever thanks to Miles’ hard work and collaboration with Burke staff. Exciting times.

- Rebecca

Photos by Mary Levin

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Homeschool Day was a hit

Posted by: Melissa Todd, School Programs Manager

The Burke hosted its first ever Homeschool Day on Dec. 4 and it was a resounding success! We had 104 students and 76 parents attend, most staying all 4 hours.

All the education staff came out for this great event. We had a series of staff-led activities in the Burke Room, staff and docents with fossils and artifacts in the exhibits for some hands-on learning, and a variety of experiments, crafts, scavenger hunts, and sketching to deepen students’ museum experience.

Dana led a presentation about giant squid, including building a life-size model of a giant squid, and then Keely led an activity to learn about salmon and make a model fish trap at the same time. Tim finished up the series with a great activity about the challenges of conservation in the context of the Yellowstone to Yukon exhibit. We had a full house for each activity, and parents were eager for more. It was a lot of fun. We can't wait for the next Homeschool Day!

Some comments from our visitors:

"A great field trip! Great hands-on lectures and knowledgeable lecturers."

"The docents were great!"

"To offer this again would be terrific!"

"Offer this from 9-4, there is so much to do!"

See our education website for info on more resources available to homeschoolers.

- Melissa

Photos:

Top: Students learned about salmon and made a model fish trap that they took home.
Middle:
Educator Tim Stetter led a conservation challenge based on the Yellowstone to Yukon exhibit.
Bottom: Students made their own Northwest Coast masks in our Pacific Voices gallery.


Wednesday, November 28, 2007

A lot can be learned from a mammoth molar

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin

The Burke’s collections total over 12 million objects, many of which are partial fossils or pieces of artifacts. But if you think that incomplete means insufficient, check out the excellent interview with Burke paleontology associate Bax Barton from Monday’s Herald (Everett, WA) .

Presented with a possible mammoth molar recently found on Hat Island, Barton takes us through the stages of paleontological research to show us what can be learned from this small piece of an enormous puzzle.

From the one tooth alone, Barton determined the specimen to be a Columbian mammoth (one of four North American species) and that the animal was roughly 21 years of age at death. With further lab study, the tooth could reveal when the animal lived, what the temperature and precipitation was like in its environment, and the diet of the mammoth.

Do you have a fossil that needs to be identified? You can make an appointment with Burke paleontologists to learn more about your fossil. Or join us on Sat., Feb. 9, 2008 at our annual Artifact ID Day and check out what other fascinating goodies community members have to inspect.

- Rebecca

Photos:

Top: Fossilized mammoth molar, photo by Suzanne Schmid, courtesy of The Herald.
Bottom: Mastodon (Mammut americanum) on display in the Burke Museum, Life and Times of Washington State exhibit.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Field Work Doesn’t Always Work Out as Planned

Posted by: Rod Crawford

Spider curator Rod Crawford shares the ups and downs of one of his latest field adventures...

My most ambitious (and, with the price of gas, expensive) spider collecting field trip of the year was to be a Memorial Day Weekend expedition to northeast Washington, in collaboration with Larry McTigue, an old friend from my caving days who wanted to hunt for new caves in the limestone deposits. The plan was to start in southern Stevens County and work our way north to really high quality areas near the Canadian border toward the end of the weekend. That was the plan...

Saturday went well for me. I got a much-needed supplementary spider sample from a beautiful spot in sagebrush country on Sinking Creek southeast of the town of Wilbur. Then we wasted a lot of time hunting for a gas station in Wilbur: population 1400 and all 3 of the stations out of business! But we finally made it to Hunters along the Columbia River where, at a site with meadow and pine forest, I got 20 species in a couple of hours including one jumping spider completely new to me. Meanwhile, Larry was searching for a lot of limestone shown on a geologic map, and finding very little of it. We found a decent campsite and went to bed with the moon out —

—to wake up with rain pattering on the tent. Not much, just enough to make the vegetation too wet for spider collecting. The sun came out later but it was noon before I could sweep any grass or beat any bushes. Our morning plans centered on an area northeast of Chewelah where a place called Johnson Lake looked promising for spiders and a place called Limestone Spring drew Larry like a magnet. But there turned out to be no rock of any kind at the spring (let alone limestone) and by the time Larry returned to the lake to pick me up I only had 18 species or so. It had been a pleasant morning, though, with a deer joining me for a little grazing while I chased wolf spiders, and Larry hung around while I sifted conifer litter to get the sample up to a barely adequate 21 species. Then we tried to exit back to the highway via a short cut. Who would have expected a fence right across the road? So it was backtracking through many miles of intricate logging roads for us before we could head north.

Heading north, as it turned out, right into a series of thunderstorms! Every place we tried that afternoon was wetter and less productive. The final indignity was Rabbit Mountain, which (if dry) would have been great for spider collecting. The road around the base of the mountain was a series of giant puddles that would have stopped anything but Larry's 4WD pickup. The road up to the ridge crest was blocked by a man and his daughter cutting firewood from a tree he'd felled right across the road. He told us the road only went another hundred yards and we might as well turn back. We waited him out and proved him a liar by going at least another mile along the ridge, but all in vain. The rain wouldn't stop, in fact it became a steady downpour, and the brush was so thick that the only way Larry could have found a rumored pit would have been by falling into it. And the rain seemed to positively encourage the local mosquitoes. Finally we'd had enough and decided to head south and (we hoped) out of the rain.

Well, we finally did get out from under the clouds, but the landscape was still wet by the time we camped on a soggy hilltop north of Spokane where I needed another supplementary spider sample. The sky was clear and the moon out when I crawled into my tent. During the night a very cold wind came up, and it was overcast and very wintry-feeling in the morning. I did manage, though, to get my tent packed and 7 spider species collected before it started to rain. Then the rain started to turn to sleet! Was this May 28 or were we in a winter time warp?

At this point the central Washington desert started looking very good indeed to us. The backup plan was to go to Dry Falls and take a trail I knew of down into Grand Coulee. All well and good except that when we got there the trail was blocked by a big steel bar with "Trail Closed" sign. However, it was warm and dry and that felt like a big plus just then. With about 10 hours of daylight and no clouds visible to the north, we drove north into Ferry County to try to salvage something from our last day in the field. The first place we tried had spiders but no limestone. The second place had limestone but no spiders. Finally in the early evening I got another good supplementary sample from the Curlew Lake area. Then for the long, long drive home. The upshot of the trip was better for me than for Larry; I at least got 5 valuable (if small) spider samples, while he found nothing. But the big collecting plans for those enticing spider habitats near the Canadian border remained just unfulfilled plans. Can't win them all!

For more on this year's spider collecting trips, see the Spider Collector's Journal.

Photo: Female Evarcha proszynskii from Wolfe Camp Road by Rod Crawford

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Recycling just got easier

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin

For our University District neighbors…

Awesome news via our friends at the Greater University Chamber of Commerce:

“Starting in July, there will be new recycling bins next to the trash cans on the Ave below 45th ST. This pilot project conducted with Seattle Public Utilities is an attempt at becoming more green. Please take the time to locate and use the recycling bins.

The effectiveness of these bins will be evaluated after 90 days, after which the decision will be made to either expand the program or remove the bins altogether. Your support in this endeavor to make the U-District more green would be greatly appreciated.”

I’m excited to have more convenient recycling in our neck of the woods, and I hope you are too. Let’s all promise to put those bins to use and hopefully this program will stick around for good!

- Rebecca

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Honoring a student at Y2Y exhibit opening

Posted by Carl Sander and Judy Davis:

This year’s high school recipient of the Washington History DayBurke Museum Award” will receive her honors at the members’ preview of Yellowstone to Yukon: Freedom to Roam on June 15...

Heather Fredericks, a student at Prosser High in Prosser, Washington, won the first ever Burke Award for her success as a regional winner of the National History Day competition. Many people from the Burke family served as judges for this year's competition; I remember Judy Davis, Ruth Pelz, Bob Benton, and myself there on that fateful day last March. Judy is some kind of a leader in history day judging circles.

Heather won the category of Senior Individual Performance for her piece The Tragedy of Pompeii: A Triumph Uncovered. I judged in the performance category and many of the entries were first rate.

Heather will be presented with her award and a family membership to the Burke at a members’ preview of our new wildlife photography exhibit on the evening of June 15th. She's very excited. Should be fun!

- Carl Sander, Public Programs Manager

Want the background? Judy shares:

History Day is a national contest for middle school and high school students. Each year the contest has a historic theme, and students may create an exhibit, a documentary, a performance, or a paper. Each type of project has time or length limitations, and must demonstrate excellent research using both primary and secondary sources. This year's theme was “Triumph and Tragedy in History.”

The reason I love to judge this contest is that the students never cease to amaze me in their abilities, creativity and knowledge. It is truly the best of academic competition.

- Judy Davis, Administrator

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

How nice to be out in the field!

Posted by: Rod Crawford

Burke spider curator Rod Crawford takes us along on a recent spider collecting trip…

So far this year, every time I had a chance for a spider collecting trip, it rained. But bad luck doesn't last forever. The atmosphere finally became cooperative in mid-April and local naturalist Laurel Ramseyer (recently arrived from Michigan via Massachusetts) wanted to find out what spider collecting was like. Our first joint site was Stone Quarry Canyon south of Ellensburg, a secluded place that I'd found using the great online map and photo resources now available. A washout in the dirt road forced us to walk, not a bad thing with meadowlarks singing and diverse wildflowers in bloom. Starting down the canyon, we were greeted by wolf spiders racing around in the just-turning-green early spring meadows.

The little tree clump (isolated among miles of sagebrush) that I'd found on aerial photos turned out to be Douglas maple, a nice surprise; I'd expected more common trees like cottonwood or pine. At least three rare spider species were among those sifted from the leaf litter. Laurel helped out by looking for spiders under rocks (she says she turned over every rock on two hillsides) while I finished the sifting and worked at sweeping grass and herbs and beating spiders from gooseberry, rabbit brush, and sagebrush. Laurel spotted the best spider of the day, Misumenops importunus (one of the flower crab spiders) lying in wait for pollinators among the flowers on a gooseberry bush. It was the first record of the species from eastern Washington! Laurel was most impressed by a large male jumping spider, Phidippus johnsonii, with a bright red abdomen, but he could see her coming and refused to be collected. I later found one in a retreat under a board at dusk.

The only humans we saw all day were two young ladies ascending the canyon on muleback and horseback. The natural flora and fauna of the canyon (the latter including many bees, bee flies, and beetles) all contributed to a most satisfying day. And our collections (including three species brought back alive for rearing) filled in yet another of the many blanks on the Washington spider distribution maps.

Of course, immersion in nature means encounters with not only herbivores and predators, but also parasites - cattle ticks were more common than some people would have found quite comfortable. But the true naturalist can't let such small things detract from fullest enjoyment of the first spring field trip!

More photos and other details on this trip can be seen on this album page from the Spider Collector's Journal site.

- Rod

Photos, from top to bottom:
Stone Quarry, photo by R. Crawford
Phidippus johnsonii, male, photo by R. Crawford
Misumeops lepidus on a balsamroot flower, ready to embrace a bee, photo by L. Ramseyer

Thursday, April 19, 2007

A new view of the Olympic Sculpture Park

Posted by: May Evans


Sculpture
Park
also showcases natural beauty of the Northwest…

If you've visited the newly-opened Olympic Sculpture Park, did you notice the "land art"? Besides the eye-popping sculptures, landscape designers have created a display of the Northwest's natural flora and fauna within the Park. To display different ecosystems, the Park was divided into four zones: valley, meadow, grove, and shore. Each zone contains the plants which naturally grow in these areas in the Northwest.


The valley zone was designed to represent the lowland coastal regions. It was planted with trees such as fir, hemlock, cedar, ginkgo, and redwood, with flowering perrenials, ferns, and other groundcovers.

The meadow zone includes three large meadows which together form a kind of natural "fenceless" park. This area was planted with wildflowers and grasses that will only be cut once a year. In this zone you will find crimson columbine, pearly everlasting, and camas lily flowers.

The grove is a forest of over 180 aspens with a meandering walking trail. This zone defines the transition from city to shore, and also features the flowering currant, wood rose, and Oregon iris.

The shore, of course, runs along the waterfront, and features common Puget Sound coastal plants, including dune grass, and nootka rose. However, the landscapers didn't stop at the shoreline. SAM wanted to restore the shoreline to its original state, and that meant extending their efforts into Puget Sound, creating a habitat bench of rocks and native underwater plants. This habitat restoration aims to bring salmon to the Sculpture Park and to highlight the uniqueness of Puget Sound's coastline. SAM is also partnering with Seattle Public Utilities in a five year beach-restoration monitoring program on this site.

So the next time you visit the Olympic Sculpture Park, notice the natural beauty beneath your feet, over your head, and below the water. Artists aren't the only ones who can create a large work of beauty.

P.S. If you’re interested in more information about native plants of Washington, check out the Burke Museum’s Herbarium Washington Flora Checklist resource.

- May

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Baby Orca Brings Hope

Posted by: May Evans

A new orca calf brings the endangered Puget Sound orca population up to 86.

Puget Sound is home to 3 pods, or groups, of Orca whales for at least 6 months out of the year. The pods, designated by the letters K, J, and L, provide scientists with a means of understanding the influence of humans on the health of Puget Sound. According to Bob Lohn, head of the NOAA Fishery Services Northwest regional office in Seattle, “These animals are part of Puget Sound’s cultural heritage and its ecology. We have an obligation to see that this population once again thrives.” This past fall, with the deaths of three adults and two calves, the pod population dropped to 85. But now, a new calf has been born.

L109, as the newest member of the L-pod, faces what could be a very difficult year. Scientists are unsure of who mothered the calf, but they have narrowed down the possibilities to two adult Orcas, a mother and her daughter. Orcas are contaminated with industrial chemicals and these collect in the fatty tissue and milk. These pollutants are then passed on to the first and second calves born to a mother. After that, "the mothers sort of clean themselves out," according to Ken Balcomb, a senior scientist at the Center for Whale Research. So if L109 belongs to the mother, it has a greater chance of survival because it will be her third calf, but it would be the daughter’s first, making it more susceptible to premature death. Experts say that if L109, whose gender has yet to be determined, survives through the summer, it has a good chance of living a full life.

The calf gives new hope to NOAA Fisheries Service, which has set its goal for local Orca recovery at a stable population of 120 animals. The most pressing dangers facing the whales are pollution, oil spills, the effects of boat traffic, and a lack of food. NOAA is working to combat these threats, and is seeking suggestions regarding the reduction of boat traffic-related trauma on the whales. Public hearings start in April, and in the meantime, be sure to download the “Whale Wise” boating guidelines.

-May

Photo by Nancy Black, Monterey Bay Whale Watch

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Burke Catches a Whale

Posted by: Rebecca Durkin


It’s in the news:
A dead fin whale was discovered floating in the Puget Sound near Everett, WA. The fin whale is the second largest whale, and, in fact, the second largest living animal. The recovered whale was still a juvenile, and measured a whopping 54 feet in length.

The Burke will become the home of this whale, but not for another 2-3 years. What’s the delay? Well, we’re letting this skeleton decompose in a whole new way…

Normally, to clean and prepare a whale skeleton for our collection, Burke researchers start by burying it in sand, allowing it to decompose. Then we scrape, cook, and clean the bones to remove any remaining muscle and tissue.

This time, the whale will be sunk off the coast of San Juan Island, where it will become the subject of an ecological study by UW’s Friday Harbor Labs and other researchers, tracking natural decomposition processes in an underwater environment (read: snails, worms, and other lovely things dining on the whale’s remains).

After 2-3 years of natural decomposition, the bones should hopefully be picked clean by ocean critters, then the bones will be retrieved and join the Burke’s mammal collection.

This is the first time the Burke is acquiring a skeleton through this novel method. Our curator of mammals, Jim Kenagy, is as excited about the process as he is about eventually receiving the bones. Along with the enormous skeleton, he hopes to have video of the seafloor activity, filmed during the years the whale is underwater, accessible to the public, perhaps online or in a Burke exhibit.

For those who have a strong stomach, keep an eye on this story. It’s not for the queazy.

- Rebecca


Photo provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration / Department of Commerce