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;Wikipedia to celebrate Rosalind Franklin’s birthday
;Canadian Copyright Collection from the British Library on Wikimedia Commons


[[File:DNA_orbit_animated_small.gif|200px|thumb|right|alt=An animated GIF showing the double helical structure of DNA|The double helical structure of DNA]]
[[File:The_farewell_(HS85-10-30885).jpg|200px|thumb|right|alt=A photo from the Picturing Canada collection|A photo from the Picturing Canada collection]]


Wikimedia UK is working together with the [http://royalsociety.org/ Royal Society] and the [http://www.nimr.mrc.ac.uk/ Medical Research Council's National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR)] to celebrate the birthday of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalind_Franklin Rosalind Franklin], the scientist whose work laid the foundations for the discovery of the structure of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA DNA].
''This post was written by Andrew Gray and Philip Hatfield and was originally published on the [http://blog.wikimedia.org/2013/07/01/picturing-canada/ blog of the Wikimedia Foundation here]''


This special event on Thursday 25 July in Mill Hill, London, features an opportunity to learn how to edit Wikipedia with a focus on articles about women in science. There is also a panel discussion led by eminent female scientists including [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athene_Donald Professor Dame Athene Donald] of Cambridge University and a presentation on the life and work of Rosalind Franklin.  
July 1st was Canada Day, and Wikimedia UK and the British Library announced the release of [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:British_Library/Picturing_Canada 2,000 historic photographs of Canada].


This event is part of a series that is planned to celebrate the centenary of the [http://www.centenary.mrc.ac.uk/ Medical Research Council] and all are welcome. Attendees will have access to a variety of excellent sources from, amongst others, the MRC, The Royal Society and the Wellcome Trust. We will have trainers available to take you through editing Wikipedia, and librarians able to explain more about the collection.  
Since September 2012, we’ve been working to digitise a collection of historic Canadian photographs and release them onto Wikimedia Commons and into the public domain. The collection itself was acquired between 1895 and 1924 and consists of photographs supplied to support [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_deposit copyright deposits] by Canadian photographers between those years. This came about through an arcane piece of colonial law, known snappily as the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_law_of_Canada#Colonial_copyright_law Colonial Copyright Law], which sought to extend British copyright protection across the empire, while also ensuring the collection of published material from these same areas. In practice, the law was a failure; only a few territories ratified it and even fewer actually deposited materials. Until 1925, however, Canada did implement the law and the Ministry of Agriculture effectively administrated the collection of copyright deposits. A copy of every item was sent to Ottawa and to London, where it was archived by the British Museum and then neglected for decades.


It's free to take part but pre-booking is required. You can reserve your space here (http://nimr-women-in-science.eventbrite.co.uk/). For more information please contact Daria Cybulska, Wikimedia UK's Programme Manager – daria.cybulska@wikimedia.org.uk
Materials collected from Canada included printed books, sheet music, maps and, of course, photographs. While the photographs were seen as trivial and undervalued at the time, what can now be perceived through the collection is a broad and human view of Canada at a crucial point in its history; a thirty year period when the Confederation developed politically, economically and socially, while garnering an international reputation. The collection itself provides views on this changing nation, from Vancouver to Halifax, with many unknown camera workers alongside well-known figures such as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._Micklethwaite Frank Micklethwaite] or [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Notman William Notman].


[[MRC,_Royal_Society,_Wikimedia_UK_Women_in_Science_Wikipedia_edit-a-thons|You can read more about the initiative here]] and join us on Twitter during the event #WISWIKI <span class="plainlinks">[http://blog.wikimedia.org.uk/2013/07/wikipedia-to-celebrate-rosalind-franklins-birthday/ <nowiki>[</nowiki>...<nowiki>]</nowiki>]</span>
All of this combines to create a strange mix of photographic subjects. Photographs of soldiers leaving for World War I are filed alongside images of cute kittens and men wrestling bears; trains are depicted steaming across the nation while boats continue to ply the water-ways; major cities are shown rapidly growing, while new settlements make their first marks in the dirt; and Eastern European immigrants rub shoulders with the First Nations.
 
Since Monday marked the 146th anniversary of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Confederation Canada’s Confederation], it seemed an appropriate time to note the upload of the collection to Wikimedia Commons. There are currently just over 2,000 photographs uploaded, each with a duplicate full-resolution TIFF copy, with more to come in the following weeks. All the images are in the public domain, and are freely available for use and reuse – please, enjoy!
 
You can see more details on the collection on [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/British_Library/Picturing_Canada Wikimedia Commons]. <span class="plainlinks">[http://blog.wikimedia.org.uk/2013/07/canadian-copyright-collection-from-the-british-library-on-wikimedia-commons/ <nowiki>[</nowiki>...<nowiki>]</nowiki>]</span>


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Revision as of 16:26, 5 July 2013

Cymraeg | English

Cymraeg | English

Wikimedia UK

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Для української мови Вікіпедії ласка, відвідайте http://uk.wikipedia.org; для Вікімедіа Україна відвідайте http://ua.wikimedia.org
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