OpenUp! mobilised data overview / Benefits and
possibilities for content providers
Mgr. Jiří FrankNational Museum
Prague, Czech Republic
www.open-up.eu
Content provider Objects on Europeana October 2013
Objects via BioCASe August 2013
Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem (FUB-BGBM) 127 839 139 193University of Copenhagen, Natural History Museum of Denmark (UCPH) 9 993 11347Institute of Botany of Slovak Academy of Sciences (IBSAS) 285 285Natural History Museum, Vienna - Herbarium W (NHMW) 33 107 60 632Národní museum/National museum (NM) 14 702 12317ETI BioInformatics, Leiden, the Netherlands (ETI) 84 280 85847Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBGK) 112 891 259 938University of Helsinki, Finish Museum of Natural History (UH) 24 173 4528The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) 196475 222 451Naturalis Biodiversity Center (NCBN) 97 023 98690National Botanic Garden, Belgium (NBGB) 55 780 59 748University of Tartu, Natural History Museum (UT-NHM) 15 142 26889Biologiezentrum der Oberoesterreichischen Landesmuseen (LandOOE) 92 296 86954Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN) 124959 280 076Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Tierstimmenarchiv (MfN) 10225 13 243GloBIS / Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (GloBIS MfN) 2353
Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander König/Zoological Research Museum Koenig (ZFMK) 2640 13 243
University of Vienna, Institute for Botany - Herbarium WU (UVIB WU) 23929 Museum of Geology, University of Tartu (MG UT) 9 968 Danish Mycological Society (DMS) 746 Natural History Museum London (NHM) 28 772Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren (MRAC) 4 527Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS) 4 074Institute of Geology at Tallinn University of Technology (GIT) 20 052British National Library (BL) Total 1 038 806 1 432 806
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Botanical collectionsFreie Universität Berlin, Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem (FUB-BGBM)
- high resolution images from 221 countries of its herbarium holdings- including almost complete C.L. Willdenow collection with many types- including specimens collected by important collectors as F.W.H.A. von
Humboldt
Institute of Botany of Slovak Academy of Sciences (IBSAS)- type specimens come from the František Nábělek’s Iter Turcico-Persicum
1909-1910 collection
Národní museum/National museum Prague (NM)- herbarium specimens from large botanical collection founded in 1818
and includes material from mid-18th century through the present
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE)- images/photographs of the living collection
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Botanical collections
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew (RBGK)- great amount of herbarium specimens collected e.g. by Charles Darwin,
Joseph Hooker or Nathaniel Wallich
National Botanic Garden of Belgium (NBGB)- great collection of significant importance from the Congo Basin and South
America
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Zoological collections
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (MFN)- animal sound archive and large butterflies collection from the Global
Butterfly Information System (GloBIS )- The Animal Sound Archive (German: Tierstimmenarchiv) is one of the
oldest and largest collections of animal voices in the world
Národní museum/National museum Prague (NM)- entomology collection including many types- vertebrate collection particularly focused in fishes- anthropology collection of pathological changes and oddities in skeletons
which is part of four large collections
University of Helsinki, Finish Museum of Natural History (UH)- large entomology collection from 19th century
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Zoological collectionsLand Oberösterreich – Oberösterreichische Landesmuseen/ Biologiezentrum (LANDOOE)
- molluscs collection of Prof. Fritz Seidl
University of Copenhagen, Natural History Museum of Denmark (UCPH)- micro-photos of the Kinorhynca (a group of marine worms) type collection
at the Natural History Museum of Denmark
Natural History Museum, University of Tartu (UT-NHM)- variable collection including also big mammals skeletons as mammoth
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Paleontological and mineralogical collections
Národní museum/National museum Prague (NM)Natural History Museum London (NHM)Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (MFN)Natural History Museum, University of Tartu (UT-NHM)Institute of Geology at Tallinn University of Technology (GIT)
Content Providers benefits and possibilitiesPublic Relation Technical aspects
Museum visitors
Education
Taxonomy revisions/collections research, publications, requests for collections visits, scientific collaboration, scientific projects, networking...
Collaboration on other projects based on the expertise or content
BioCASe, GeoCASe and GBIF portals
Biodiversity Library Exhibition
Newsletter Social media
Conferences and events
Promotion materials
ScientistsResearches
AcademicsTeachers
Broad public
Otherinstitutions
Visibility of the content andinstitution on Europeana
OpenUp! project dissemination activities and tools
Unification of collections data in various formats
Mapping of the data by international standards ABCD (EFG)
Possibility to provide the data on BioCASe or GeoCASe portals
Checking the data by the Data Quality Toolkit
Support with the BioCASe installation
Checking the completeness and compliance of mapping with Europeana standards by BioCASe monitor tool
Metadata enrichment by the common names and synonyms
OIH-PHM protocoll increasing usability of the data in other platforms
Europeana Natural History Aggregator
OpenUp! Support
BioCASe instalation
Support and documentation from the HelpDesk
Target audience
PossibilitiesThe project core elements
Direct outcomes
Access to the data
www.open-up.eu
Thank you for your attention.