Martin it seems appears to wish to dispute whether citizen science is older in Britain or USA. Wow
is that distinction worth fussing over? It is a hard one to define a start point. Even if the RSPB was founded in 1889, if the Christmas Bird Count (I assume the American one), started in 1900, then I wonder if the RSPB had organised any citizen science within
11 years of starting. Existence of RSPB is not of itself citizen science. So which was the first to reach any kind of data-useful standing? Who cares?
The article makes the point that citizen science refers to in this case: “the dozens of volunteers
who took part each year”. Thus Selborne, John James Audubon and Gilbert White are hardly relevant, when they were working mostly on their own and not part of large scale organised activities (citizen science). The term also carries the general idea that the
people involved are not professionals (i.e. paid) but volunteers. “Erin Rogers, the chair of the Australian Citizen Science Association, said it could provide meaningful data to help form decision-making, while also engaging the general public in science.”
Philip.
From: Martin Butterfield [
Sent: Sunday, 24 February, 2019 2:49 PM
To: Sue Beatty
Cc: ; Geoffrey Dabb; COG List
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Some good news for Eastern Curlews?
I hope the rest of the article is more correct than this "Professor Justin Marshall, the chief investigator at Coral Watch, said birdwatching was
the oldest form of citizen science, originating in the United States."
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The Natural History of Selborne is a book by English naturalist and ornithologist Gilbert
White. It was first published in 1789.
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John James Audubon (born Jean Rabin; April 26, 1785 – January 27, 1851). so unless Audubon
was shotting at the age of 4 he was well behind Gilbert White
Perhaps he is on about the Christmas Bird Count which started in 1900? Nice try no cigar: the RSPB was founded in 1889!
Googling the Professor's name he seems to be, surprisingly in view of that statement, of British birth arther than from the US.
On Sun, 24 Feb 2019 at 14:31, Sue Beatty <> wrote: