Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Scientists Work on Encyclopedia of Life

By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -- In a whale-sized project, the world's scientists plan to compile everything they know about all of Earth's 1.8 million known species and put it all on one Web site, open to everyone.

The effort, called the Encyclopedia of Life, will include species descriptions, pictures, maps, videos, sound, sightings by amateurs, and links to entire genomes and scientific journal papers. Its first pages of information will be shown Wednesday in Washington where the massive effort is being announced by some of the world's leading scientific institutions and universities. The project will take about 10 years to complete.

"It's an interactive zoo," said James Edwards, who will be the encyclopedia's executive director. Edwards currently helps run a global biodiversity information system.

If the new encyclopedia progresses as planned, it should fill about 300 million pages, which, if lined up end-to-end, would be more than 52,000 miles long, able to stretch twice around the world at the equator.

The MacArthur and Sloan foundations have given a total $12.5 million to pay for the first 2 1/2 years of the massive effort, but it will be free and accessible to everyone.

Wikispot - Local Community Wiki's

Local guys Michael Ivanov and Philip Neustrom of Davis Wiki fame have launched Wikispot a wiki creation platform for local community wiki's. It's a non-profit effort to let communities anywhere in the world initiate, maintain, publicize and fund wikis.

Great concept, I'll be looking forward to watching this grow.