Click to: riverhouses.org/2020-macaulay
The upcoming month of May is our Bird Migration Month in the River Houses, and if you are studying birds or natural history in general in your homeschool, there’s no better place to explore online (for hours!) than the Macaulay Library at Cornell University โ this May or any month of the year.
The Macaulay Library is an international repository not of books, but of sound recordings and images from nature:
“The Macaulay Library is the worldโs premier scientific archive of natural history audio, video, and photographs. Although the Macaulay Libraryโs history is rooted in birds, the collection includes amphibians, fishes, and mammals, and the collection preserves recordings of each speciesโ behavior and natural history. Our mission is to facilitate the ability of others to collect and preserve such recordings and to actively promote the use of these recordings for diverse purposes spanning scientific research, education, conservation, and the arts.“ (macaulaylibrary.org)
The Macaulay Library was established almost a hundred years ago as the Library of Natural Sounds by Cornell ornithologist Arthur Allen (1885โ1964), a pioneer in recording and analyzing bird songs with the bulky recording equipment of the day. The original natural sounds collection has since expanded to include photographs and video recordings, and while it focuses largely on birds, it includes materials on other groups as well.
Pick any bird in North America, and almost any bird species in the rest of the world as well, and you can pull up photographs and sound recordings from the Macaulay Library. In much of the United States this month, for example, you can hear Mockingbirds like this one singing all day long with barely a pause:
Or maybe you’ve got one of these noisy little fellows in your backyard this month:
You can search the Macaulay Library’s collections by species and by region, and you can filter for image and sound quality, age, sex, associated behaviors, and more.
We use images and sounds from the Macaulay Library to illustrate our Friday Bird Families posts here at the River Houses, and you can always click on the Macaulay Library catalog numbers in the captions of these images to find out more and to browse related images and sounds of the species shown.
If you have curious naturalists in your homeschool, set them down in front of a large screen (for better viewing) and invite them to spend some time discovering the sights and sounds of birds all over the world.
What educational treasures have you discovered in your library this Leo Term? ๐
โกโ Dukedoms large enough: Have you found all the local libraries in your area? There may be more than you realize, and there’s no better homeschool field trip than a field trip to a new library! The WorldCat Library Finder will help you find all the library collections near you โ public and private, large and small โ and the WorldCat catalog itself will help you locate the closest copy of almost any book in the world. ๐
โกโ Books in the running brooks: The sidebar on the River Houses website (riverhouses.org) has links to several important online library collections that we like to explore, as well as permanent links to WorldCat and the WorldCat Library Finder. Why not sit yourself down at a large screen for a while (rather than a phone) and give them a browse. ๐
โกโ When in doubt, go to the library: This is one of our regular Homeschool Books & Libraries posts. Add your name to our weekly mailing list (riverhouses.org/newsletter) and get great homeschool teaching ideas delivered right to your mailbox all through the year. ๐