TY - JOUR
T1 - Cowboys, scientists, and fossils
T2 - The field site and local collaboration in the American West
AU - Vetter, Jeremy
N1 - Funding Information: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors would like to dedicate this work to Professor F. Demichelis, for all the work that she performed, aiming to reach a better understanding of the physics of the processes that lead to the production of electronic-quality amorphous and microcrystalline semiconductors. The authors are also grateful to all researchers and technicians from the Universidade Nova de Lisboa and CEMOP, UNINOVA, who made this work possible. Special thanks are due to G. Evans and A Gonqalo, for the help given during the determination of the uniformity of the films and measurement of temperature profiles inside the reactor. This work was supported by the NATO Science for Stability Programme (Phase 111) under the project PO-THINFILM and by the Brite EuRam project under the contract No. 8225/94.
PY - 2008/6
Y1 - 2008/6
N2 - Even as the division between professional scientists and laypeople became sharper by the end of the nineteenth century, the collaboration of local people remained important in scientific fieldwork, especially in sciences such as vertebrate paleontology that required long-term extractive access to research sites. In the North American West, the competition between museums and universities for the best fossil quarry sites involved negotiations with locals. The conflict over differing conceptions of the field site is vividly demonstrated through an examination of one site on the High Plains of western Nebraska in the early twentieth century. This case offers a rare opportunity to see not only how professionals regarded such sites but also how the resident ranching family, the Cooks, attempted to exercise leverage over the scientific fieldwork that took place there. While the Carnegie Museum of Pittsburgh became mired in protracted conflict with the Cooks over discovery claims and the ongoing control of the site, the University of Nebraska and the American Museum of New York developed more harmonious relations with the site's resident ranching family.
AB - Even as the division between professional scientists and laypeople became sharper by the end of the nineteenth century, the collaboration of local people remained important in scientific fieldwork, especially in sciences such as vertebrate paleontology that required long-term extractive access to research sites. In the North American West, the competition between museums and universities for the best fossil quarry sites involved negotiations with locals. The conflict over differing conceptions of the field site is vividly demonstrated through an examination of one site on the High Plains of western Nebraska in the early twentieth century. This case offers a rare opportunity to see not only how professionals regarded such sites but also how the resident ranching family, the Cooks, attempted to exercise leverage over the scientific fieldwork that took place there. While the Carnegie Museum of Pittsburgh became mired in protracted conflict with the Cooks over discovery claims and the ongoing control of the site, the University of Nebraska and the American Museum of New York developed more harmonious relations with the site's resident ranching family.
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U2 - 10.1086/588688
DO - 10.1086/588688
M3 - Article
C2 - 18702398
SN - 0021-1753
VL - 99
SP - 273
EP - 303
JO - ISIS
JF - ISIS
IS - 2
ER -