The Art and Practice of the Natural History Field Journal

When you keep a natural history field journal, you join a long and proud tradition, shared through time with naturalists, explorers, and artists. Careful observation of nature, followed by careful writing and illustration, is a time-tested technique for “capturing” some of the wonders of the planet’s life. While many of us have become dependent on technology to record notes and photographs, the practice of keeping a physical journal confers many advantages. Making a sketch requires you to look closely at your subject in a way that taking a photograph does not. A carefully created field notebook is a permanent record that will outlive technical obsolescence and even the life of its creator. Today, the field notebooks of figures such as Henry Walter Bates, Alexander von Humboldt, and Maria Sibylla Merian continue to provide useful data and artistic inspiration centuries after the death of their creators. Students will develop a regular natural history field journal practice by creating a journal as a record of their journey through Costa Rica. Along the way, they will document their observations through structured and unstructured entries using a variety of writing and drawing techniques. Assignments will be based on content from Introduction to Tropical Field Ecology and Tropical Entomology. The journals will be exhibited in an end of term show at the Dorr Museum. Evaluation will be based on completion of assigned entries, individual growth, and overall commitment to all aspects of this immersion experience.

This course is part of a three-credit expeditionary program in neotropical field ecology. Students must enroll in all three courses.

Course Number
MD1032
Area of Study
Field Ecology & Natural History
Course Level
Introductory
Instructors
Carrie Graham, Stephen Ressel