Research Initiatives
Powdermill Avian Research Center (PARC)
The avian research center at Powdermill Nature Reserve, Carnegie Museum of Natural History’s environmental research center in Rector, Pennsylvania, bands about 10,000 birds each year. Track weekly and annual banding data on the avian research center’s website, and learn more about other research initiatives like flight tunnel analysis and the bioacoustics lab. Information on banding workshops, visits, and the center’s facilities is also available.
Maps & Geographic Information Systems
Carnegie Museum of Natural History recognizes the importance of collaborative interdisciplinary research and views geographic information systems (GIS) as a tool that can connect many fields of research. In 2006, Carnegie Museum of Natural History established the GIS Laboratory at Powdermill Nature Reserve to enhance and expand research capabilities for museum staff, research associates, and students. Research through the GIS Laboratory focuses on the interface between conservation biology, environmental sciences, and geospatial technologies.
Childs Frick Expedition
Childs Frick, son of Pittsburgh industrialist Henry Clay Frick, led two expeditions to Africa. The first, in 1909–10, was to British East Africa, where he collected 126 mammals for Carnegie Museum of Natural History. The second in 1911–12, officially the Childs Frick Abyssinian Expedition, also included British East Africa. Over 500 mammals were collected for Carnegie Museum, and some 5,000 birds were collected for the Smithsonian.
Forest Ecosystem Research
Powdermill Nature Reserve, the museum’s environmental research center, hosts a variety of research projects on forest processes, including a landscape-level experiment on the long-term effects of deer browsing, understory removal, and salvage logging on forest regeneration after wind disturbance. This research is benefitted from unmanned aerial monitoring based out of Powdermill’s GIS Laboratory, which is regularly monitoring research sites. New partners are invited to initiate research in sites that represent combinations of these treatments.
Aquatic Macroinvertebrates
Macroinvertebrates.org serves as a digital reference collection for common aquatic macroinvertebrates of the eastern United States. These organisms are important for monitoring water quality in our rivers and streams. Highly zoomable images of about 150 freshwater taxa are included in the collection. Order, family, and genus level diagnostic characters are indicated on the images to aid in identification. This site was funded by the National Science Foundation and was created in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University and Clemson University.
PA Mammals
The PA Mammals archive is a list of the 70 mammals known to live or to have lived in Pennsylvania. The list provides common names and currently recognized scientific names. Maps are shown for each species whose current distribution is known. Some mammals are found throughout the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Others have very limited distribution due to such factors as soil requirements, food preferences, or geographic barriers to dispersal.
Climate and Urban Systems Partnership Pittsburgh
The Pittsburgh CUSP network is a group of Pittsburgh-based informal science institutions, local green and sustainable practice organizations, and groups with affinity for community life, outdoor recreation, or economic viability. The network is coming together to develop an array of activities to spur thoughtful discussions about predicted effects of climate change in the city, strategies for adapting to such change, and the organizations and city systems working together to address these issues.
BirdSafe Pittsburgh
BirdSafe Pittsburgh is a local partnership that engages volunteer citizen scientists in researching the issue of birds colliding with windows. Window collisions are one of the leading causes of human-induced avian mortality, with estimates of up to 1 billion birds dying each year in the United States alone. Volunteers find and document birds that have collided with windows throughout Pittsburgh and monitor their homes in order to learn more about window collisions on residential buildings. Dead birds are brought back to Carnegie Museum of Natural History to become part of the collection. Live birds are safely captured to be rehabilitated and released.
Museum Library
The Library of Carnegie Museum of Natural History is particularly strong in scientific periodicals. Many periodicals are received through the museum's publication exchange program, which distributes Annals of Carnegie Museum to other museums and libraries.
American Indians and the Natural World
American Indians have an enduring heritage of connections with the natural universe. These connections are the focus of Carnegie Museum of Natural History's Alcoa Foundation Hall of American Indians. Through exploration of four different visions of living in and with the natural world—those of the Tlingit of the Northwest Coast, the Hopi of the Southwest, the Iroquois of the Northeast, and the Lakota of the Plains—North, South, East, West: American Indians and the Natural World examines the belief systems, philosophies, and practical knowledge that guide Indian peoples' interactions with the natural world. Though all of these peoples have chosen different pathways and strategies for making a life in their various environments, one similar concept is voiced by all—that a reciprocal connection exists between people and the world.