The Scout Report
January 30, 2015 -- Volume 21, Number 4
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
DensityDesignSan Diego Zoo Animal Finder
Body Worlds: Resource Materials for Educators & Parents
The International Breastfeeding Journal
The National Recording Registry 2013
School of Open
Teaching History with 100 Objects
Wyandotte Constitution
General Interest
WWF: The Energy ReportThe Salt: NPR
JournalTOCs
Walker Art Center Magazine
Codex Mendoza
No More
The Burgess Shale
Building Inspector
Network Tools
SwipeRadioLingua.ly
In the News
Asteroids In the NewsCopyright and subscription information appear at the end of the Scout Report. For more information on all services of Internet Scout, please visit our Website: https://scout.wisc.edu
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inclusion in the Scout Report, visit our Selection Criteria page at:
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https://scout.wisc.edu/report/2015/0130
Feedback is always welcome: scout@scout.wisc.edu
Research and Education
http://www.densitydesign.org
DensityDesign,
a
Research
Lab
at
Politecnico
de
Milano,
has
mastered
the
art
of
visually
presenting
variegated
social
and
organizational
phenomena.
As
the
site
suggests,
by
"rearranging
numeric
data,
reinterpreting
qualitative
information,
locating
information
geographically,
and
building
visual
taxonomies,
we
can...describe
and
unveil
the
hidden
connections
in
complex
systems."
From
the
homepage,
readers
may
explore
a
host
of
interesting
visualizations,
including
representations
of
sonic
environments,
Wikipedia
controversies,
and
Cesarean
sections.
The
Research
tab
opens
to
further
fascinating
projects,
while
the
Blog
examines
the
various
methods
Density
Designs
utilizes
in
their
visualization
work.
For
readers
who
love
eye-popping
graphs
and
models
that
contribute
to
the
understanding
of
complex
information,
this
site
is
sure
to
inspire.
[CNH]
http://zoo.sandiegozoo.org/animals
The
San
Diego
Zoo
is
home
to
hundreds
of
different
exotic
animals,
from
anacondas
and
meerkats
to
dung
beetles
and
giant
pandas.
With
the
zoo's
animal
finder,
located
on
its
website,
students
can
locate
and
easily
research
the
animals
that
fascinate
them.
There
are
several
convenient
ways
to
scout
the
site.
Readers
may
proceed
alphabetically,
by
scrolling
through
the
photographs
of
amur
leopards
and
zebras.
Readers
may
also
like
to
search
by
category,
such
as
Africa
Rocks
or
Australian
Outback.
In
addition,
the
site
hosts
an
Animal
Name
Quick
Search
for
locating
specific
species.
Selecting
any
animal
will
link
to
useful
information.
For
instance,
at
up
to
10
feet
long
and
176
pounds,
the
Komodo
dragon
is
the
largest
living
lizard
species
with
ancestors
dating
back
more
than
100
million
years.
[CNH]
http://www.bodyworlds.com/en/exhibitions/free_materials.html
Body
Worlds,
first
presented
in
Tokyo
in
1995,
is
an
exhibition
of
preserved
human
bodies
and
body
parts.
The
bodies
on
display
have
been
preserved
using
plastination,
a
process
that
was
invented
by
the
show's
curator,
German
anatomist
Gunther
von
Hagens,
in
1977.
While
the
exhibit
is
designed
to
be
seen
in
person,
there
are
several
interesting
resources
on
this
website
for
teachers,
parents,
and
families.
Readers
can
start
with
either
the
Student
Guide
or
the
Family
Guide
(available
in
PDF
format),
then
peruse
each
guide
for
an
excellent
overview
of
the
exhibition,
with
photographs
and
text
that
introduce
the
reader
to
the
locomotive,
nervous,
respiratory,
cardiovascular,
and
digestive
systems
of
the
human
body.
For
any
educator
or
parent
teaching
anatomy,
this
is
a
resource
that
brings
the
subject
to
life.
[CNH]
http://www.internationalbreastfeedingjournal.com
According
to
the
World
Health
Organization
(WHO),
"If
every
child
was
breastfed
within
an
hour
of
birth,
given
only
breast
milk
for
their
first
six
months
of
life,
and
continued
breastfeeding
up
to
the
age
of
two
years,
about
800,000
child
lives
would
be
saved
every
year."
The
International
Breastfeeding
Journal,
which
is
open
access
and
free
to
anyone,
publishes
the
latest
research
on
breastfeeding
and
all
its
health-related,
psychological,
sociological,
and
even
anthropological
impacts.
Recent
articles
have
included
a
qualitative
study
on
the
implementation
of
a
new
initiative
in
an
Australian
hospital,
a
cross-sectional
study
of
Ethiopian
mothers
who
breastfeed,
and
a
commentary
on
breastfeeding
in
public.
With
hundreds
of
articles
online,
the
International
Breastfeeding
Journal
is
a
great
resource
for
anyone
interested
in
this
fundamental
health
practice.
[CNH]
http://www.loc.gov/rr/record/nrpb/registry/nrpb-2013reg.html
Every
year,
the
National
Recording
Preservation
Board
selects
25
recordings
that
are
"culturally,
historically,
or
aesthetically
significant."
They
must
also
be
at
least
10
years
old.
With
the
library's
2013
selection,
the
number
of
items
in
the
registry
reached
a
total
of
400.
The
picks
are
as
diverse
as
they
are
fascinating,
ranging
from
the
1915
Broadway
musical,
"They
Didn't
Believe
Me,"
to
U2's
breakthrough
rock
album,
"The
Joshua
Tree."
Each
recording
is
accompanied
by
an
annotation
explaining
the
cultural
and
historical
significance
of
the
selection.
For
instance,
George
Washington
Johnson
was
the
first
African
American
to
make
commercial
records.
His
1896
recording,
"The
Laughing
Song,"
was
his
best
known
song,
and
it
is
bound
to
make
readers
smile.
[CNH]
http://schoolofopen.p2pu.org
The School of Open offers free online courses, face-to-face workshops, and training programs on topics that loosely gather around the subject of openness - in education, research, and science. Typical topics include Creative Commons licenses (what they are and how to use them), open educational resources, and how to utilize and share creative works. Interested readers can register for Facilitated courses (Creative Commons for K-12 Educators) or Stand-alone courses (Get CC Savvy) that allow students to work through the material at their own pace. Training Programs are offered in Spanish, English, Chinese, and other languages. Readers may also volunteer to design and run their own courses through the site. [CNH]
http://www.teachinghistory100.org
Teaching
History
with
100
Objects
may
be
funded
by
the
United
Kingdom's
Department
of
Education,
but
the
resources
available
on
the
website
will
be
useful
to
educators
the
world
over.
The
100
objects
in
question
consist
of
historically
significant
Irish
posters,
English
canons,
Chinese
tea
pots,
Viking
scales,
and
many
other
fascinating
objects.
The
site
can
be
scouted
in
a
number
of
convenient
ways.
Readers
can
search
by
topics,
dates,
places,
or
themes,
or
simply
select
an
image
from
the
homepage
to
get
started.
Each
object
is
accompanied
by
a
brief
annotation,
as
well
as
additional
categories,
such
as
About
the
object,
A
bigger
picture,
Teaching
ideas,
and
For
the
Classroom.
Each
category
is
packed
with
information,
ideas,
and
suggestions
for
bringing
history
to
life.
[CNH]
http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/90272
When Kansas became the 34th state on January 29th, 1861 it was this document, the Wyandotte Constitution, that was implemented as its charter. The document was not without controversy, as proslavery and antislavery movements sparred over provisions in the text. In fact, the Wyandotte Constitution was the fourth constitution written during what became known as the Bleeding Kansas era, a period noted for its fiery political feuds. The constitution can be read in its (somewhat faded) original form on the Kansas Historical Society's website. It can also be read in a full text version, shared, printed, or "saved to bookbag" if readers have an account. [CNH]
General Interest
http://wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/footprint/climate_carbon_energy/energy_solutions22/renewable_energy/sustainable_energy_report/
Published
in
2011,
The
Energy
Report
from
WWF
makes
a
bold
claim
-
that
the
world
can
be
run
entirely
on
sustainable
energy
by
2050.
The
Report
also
claims
that
the
transition
will
not
only
be
possible,
but
cost-effective
as
we
already
have
most
of
the
technology
necessary
to
do
it.
The
scenario
will
also
contribute
to
equitable
access
to
resources.
The
256-page
report
can
be
downloaded
in
full
from
the
web
site.
In
addition,
The
Energy
Report
Summary
Booklet,
which
outlines
the
points
in
20
pages,
can
also
be
downloaded.
For
those
who
just
want
the
main
points,
they
are
available
on
the
WWF
website.
Although
the
ideas
in
the
report
are
nearly
five
years
old,
they
are
still
provocative
and
constitute
a
worthy
read
for
anyone
interested
in
energy
policy.
[CNH]
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/
NPR's The Salt is an extraordinarily entertaining food blog with an eye toward "food news from the farm to the plate and beyond." The site updates daily. Recent articles have covered such topics as faux fish made from plants, an investment fund that is bankrolling environmentally sustainable fish farming, and a debate about whether oranges or orange juice are more nutritious. The articles are fresh and punchy, highlighting the simultaneous seriousness and absurdity of food and food culture in sparkling prose. [CNH]
http://www.journaltocs.hw.ac.uk/
Current Awareness Services have been published by libraries for a long time. They usually include new books, table of contents alerts, blogs, citation alerts, and other information. JournalTOCs builds on the idea by offering tables of contents (TOCs) for the newest issues of thousands of academic journals via this free website. Readers may type in the name of any journal in the search function on the homepage to access that journal's latest table of contents. They may also browse by publishers and subjects. For librarians, students, and scholars who want to keep up to date on the breaking research in their field, this is a valuable resource. [CNH]
http://www.walkerart.org/magazine/
The
Walker
Art
Center,
with
its
emphasis
on
performance
and
community
engagement,
is
one
of
the
country's
most
progressive
and
groundbreaking
museums.
It
is
no
surprise,
then,
that
the
art
center’s
magazine
presents
a
wealth
of
intriguing
content,
often
drawn
from
other
sources
around
the
web.
Recent
featured
articles
have
focused
on
the
winners
of
the
2015
Joyce
Awards,
profiled
Ava
DuVernay,
the
director
of
the
Oscar-nominated
film,
Selma,
and
examined
Putin’s
crackdown
on
artistic
expression
in
Russia.
The
magazine
can
be
scouted
through
a
search
function
or
by
categories
such
as
Art
News
from
Elsewhere,
Articles,
Blogs,
and
Slideshows.
In
this
last
section,
a
delightful
collection
-
Opening
the
Road
Box
-
showcases
a
collection
of
artifacts
related
to
Merce
Cunningham
and
his
dance
company
who
prodded,
problematized,
and
reinvented
the
world
of
modern
dance
for
over
50
years.
[CNH]
http://codice.manuvo.com/inicio.php?lang=english
Before
the
Spanish
invaded
what
is
now
Mexico,
the
pre-Hispanic
cultures
of
that
region
used
codices
-
"pictorial
and
iconic
documents"
-
to
preserve
and
transmit
their
histories,
cultures,
and
values.
This
website
is
a
digital
resource
providing
close
study
of
a
Mexican
Codex,
with
its
pictures,
maps,
lineage
lists,
mathematics,
and
other
conceptual
expressions.
Readers
may
want
to
start
by
reading
the
Introduction,
housed
under
the
About
Tab,
that
describes
the
history
and
nature
of
Mexican
Codices.
Once
situated,
explore
the
document
itself
by
clicking
the
Codex
tab.
Perhaps
the
most
engaging
feature
of
this
site
is
the
Transcription
option
found
here.
By
selecting
the
first
icon
on
the
left
hand
side
of
the
page,
readers
need
only
hover
over
the
text
to
read
a
translation
of
this
fascinating
lens
into
the
past.
The
transcription
is
available
in
English
and
Spanish
and
a
full
text
option
is
also
available.
[CNH]
http://site.nomore.org
When
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention
(CDC)
reported
in
2010
that
nearly
one
in
five
(18.3%)
adult
women
in
the
United
States
had
been
raped
at
some
point
in
their
lives,
many
people
were
shocked.
Nomore.org,
a
public
awareness
campaign,
seeks
to
bring
that
number
down
to
zero
by
breaking
social
stigma,
normalizing
conversation
about
sexual
assault
and
domestic
violence,
and
increasing
resources
for
prevention
efforts.
Readers
may
want
to
start
by
watching
the
videos
of
NFL
players
and
other
celebrities
speaking
out
against
sexual
assault,
or
perhaps
read
"10
Questions
About
Sexual
Assault
You
Were
too
Embarrassed
to
Ask,"
an
approachable
and
research-based
educational
article.
Click
on
the
tab
The
Latest
to
peruse
the
various
articles,
videos,
and
interviews
from
No
More's
archives.
[CNH]
http://www.burgess-shale.rom.on.ca
The
Burgess
Shale,
protected
in
Canada's
Yoho
National
Park,
preserves
one
of
the
world's
first
complex
marine
ecosystems.
The
site
was
discovered
in
1909
by
paleontologist
Charles
Walcott
and
has
produced
some
of
the
most
interesting
soft
fossils
in
history.
On
the
website,
readers
may
scout
the
informative
Introduction,
and
then
move
on
to
the
Science
and
History
sections,
which
describe
in
details
the
significance
of
the
fossil
findings
at
the
Burgess
Shale.
The
Fossil
Gallery,
with
its
dozens
of
photographs
of
specimens
from
the
site,
is
another
great
place
to
begin.
Of
special
interest,
the
Virtual
Sea
Odyssey
allows
visitors
to
experience
life
in
the
ancient
ocean
"first
hand."
The
site
is
available
in
both
English
and
French.
[CNH]
http://buildinginspector.nypl.org
The
landscape
of
New
York
City
has
always
been
in
constant
flux.
To
keep
track
of
the
city
as
it
changes,
the
New
York
Public
library
has
been
amassing
thousands
of
historical
street
atlases
over
decades,
"making
those
lost
places
findable."
The
website
invites
motivated
amateurs
to
take
the
digitized,
computer-generated
amalgams
of
these
old
maps,
and
"test
drive"
them.
In
other
words,
readers
are
invited
to
walk
around
New
York
and
take
stock
of
what
computers
have
generated,
making
sure
that
the
models
are
accurate.
The
process
is
based
on
a
consensus
model:
if
more
than
three
people
agree
that
the
generated
map
is
accurate,
then
it
is
recorded
as
such.
Hence,
the
New
York
Public
Library
plans
to
digitally
generate
and
virtually
crowd
source
a
brand
new
map
of
Old
New
York.
[CNH]
Network Tools
http://www.swiperadioapp.com
SwipeRadio makes it possible to listen to your favorite radio stations on your iPhone. Upon opening, the app will ask you to identify your location, from which you may choose stations. Stations can also be chosen from 50,000 possibilities around the country and the world, and searched by keyword as well. It's a great alternative for listening to your favorite radio stations on the go. Currently designed for iPad and iPhone running iOS 7.0+. [CNH]
http://www.lingua.ly
There are an abundance of language learning programs on the market. Few of them, however, take advantage of the world wide web. Lingua.ly seeks to do just that. So far it is offered in English, Spanish, French, and Hebrew with the option to learn one of nine other languages. After first creating a free account, readers can start by learning vocabulary. Once that is accomplished, the program starts to recommend websites that are at the learner's reading level. In this manner, the web becomes a language learning facility. [CNH]
In the News
Asteroid That Hurtled Past Earth Has a Miniature Moon
http://www.nbcnews.com/science/space/asteroid-hurtled-past-earth-has-miniature-moon-n294621
Best ever view of asteroid Ceres
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31009791
Solar System Exploration: Asteroids: Overview
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Asteroids
Huff Post: Asteroids
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/asteroid/
The Age of Asteroids
http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/age-asteroids
Asteroids: between a rock and a hard place
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/sep/20/asteroids-rock-hard-place-meteor-strike-russia-nicaragua
NASA
and
asteroids
were
in
the
news
this
week
as
the
1,100-foot
wide
Asteroid
2004
BL86
hurtled
past
Earth
on
Monday.
Days
before
it
neared,
Joseph
Pollock
of
Appalachian
State
University
and
Petr
Pravec
of
the
Ondrejov
Observatory
discovered
that
the
asteroid
has
its
own
230-foot
moon.
Scientists
were
able
to
grab
amazing
images
of
the
space
rock
and
its
tiny
moon
using
NASA's
Deep
Space
Network
antenna
at
Goldstone,
California.
Also
this
week,
NASA's
Dawn
spacecraft
delivered
groundbreaking
pictures
of
Ceres,
which,
at
a
diameter
of
950
kilometers,
is
the
largest
known
asteroid
in
our
solar
system.
These
images,
with
a
resolution
exceeding
anything
seen
by
telescopes,
suggest
the
previously
identified
"white
spot"
in
Ceres'
Northern
Hemisphere
is
likely
a
large
impact
crater
on
the
surface
of
the
asteroid.
[CNH]
The first two links offer coverage of the asteroids 2004 BL86 and Ceres, respectively. The third link navigates to NASA's excellent overview of asteroids, including 10 Need-to-Know Things About Asteroids, while the fourth link opens to several years of the Huffington Post's coverage of asteroids. Fifth, readers may peruse The Age of Asteroids, a New Yorker article in which journalist Jonathan Blitzer examines the dangers - and the possible economic boons - of near-earth asteroids. Lastly, Tom Lamont explores what governments are doing to protect the earth from the one million or so "city-killer" asteroids in our solar system.
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Internet Scout Team | ||
---|---|---|
Craig Hase | [CNH] | Editor |
Catherine Dixon | [CBD] | Managing Editor |
Debra Shapiro | [DS] | Contributing Editor |
Edward Almasy | [EA] | Director |
Rachael Bower | [REB] | Director |
Kendra Bouda | [KAB] | Metadata and Information Specialist |
Elzbieta Beck | [EB] | Internet Cataloger |
Samantha Abrams | [SA] | Internet Cataloger |
Corey Halpin | [CRH] | Software Engineer |
Yizhe (Charles) Hu | [YH] | Web Developer |
Cea Stapleton | [CS] | Web Developer |
Zev Weiss | [ZW] | Technical Specialist |
Chris Wirz | [CW] | Administrative Coordinator |
Annie Ayres | [AA] | Administrative Assistant |
Adam Schwartz | [AS] | Administrative Assistant |
For information on additional contributors, see the Internet Scout staff page.