About the Project
The EBCA project, and the associated INOTAXA project, grew from a desire by
the partners to widen greatly the accessibility of the information they hold.
Currently data needed to undertake many kinds of research, including taxonomic,
are available only as a scattered and widely distributed resources, inaccessible
or unknown to the majority of the people who need them. Many of these data are
held by the project partners, in their libraries, attached to specimens in their
collections, in their card indices or in databases.
A major resource for Mesoamerica, and the initial focus of this project, is
the Biologia Centrali-Americana. Currently the text is made available here as
navigable JPEG images. It is also being marked up into XML and will be made
fully searchable. Species and other taxa will be viewable individually, and
links established from suitable points to collections databases, catalogues
of names, other digitized texts, and web tools. In this way all relevant data
sources will be made available through a single access point. Initially the
resource will be available through the Internet, but production on CD-ROM is
being considered. Details of the project are presented in the documents linked
to from this page.
As of 2016, the pages hosting the eBCA are no longer being maintained, though the content will be stable until central support for the platform is unavailable. The entirety of the Biologia Centrali-Americana is available through the Biodiversity Heritage Library, including the volumes for Archaeology, with additional services such as taxonomic name finding, easy navigation of the text, and the ability to create custom pdfs of the content.
Project Documents
PowerPoint presentations
- Anna L. Weitzman & Christopher H. C. Lyal. taXMLit:
a vital piece of the puzzle for digitally interoperable taxonomy. Presented
at the Taxonomic Databases Working Group meeting, Christchurch, New Zealand,
14 October 2004.
- Anna L. Weitzman & Christopher H. C. Lyal. Data
Standards: objective data, subjective data, and data interchange. Presented
at the Taxonomic Databases Working Group meeting, Christchurch, New Zealand,
14 October 2004.
- Anna L. Weitzman, Christopher H. C. Lyal, & Thomas Garnett. The
Biologia Centrali-Americana Centennial: A vision for electronic access to
taxonomic resources, the information interface between libraries and systematic
biology. A talk presented at The National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian
Institution, June 2004.
- Christopher H. C. Lyal & Anna L. Weitzman. The
Electronic Biologia Centrali-Americana: A vision for electronic access to
taxonomic resources: the information interface between libraries and systematic
biology. A talk presented at The Natural History Museum, London, February
2004.
- Anna L. Weitzman & Christopher H. C. Lyal. Implementing
the Global Taxonomy Initiative Objective 3: Increasing Access to Taxonomic
Information in Meso-America. Poster presented at Convention on Biological
Diversity, Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice,
9th meeting, November 2003.
Other articles, etc.
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