‘Riding High on a Spiral’

Wadd Crick letterThis Friday 25 April is ‘DNA Day’, an international celebration of the day in 1953 when James Watson, Francis Crick, Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin and colleagues at Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, announced the discovery of the famous ‘double-helix’ structure of DNA. I thought this would be a good opportunity to look at some of the Watson and Crick-related material in the ‘Towards Dolly’ collections.

The C.H. Waddington collection contains a copy (GB 237 Coll-41/5/4/2) of Waddington’s review of James Watson’s book The Double Helix (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1968). Titled ‘Riding High on a Spiral’ and published in the Sunday Times, 28 May 1968, Waddington compares DNA to playing ‘a role in life rather like that played by the telephone directory in the social life of London: you can’t do anything much without it, but, having it, you need a lot of other things – telephones, wires and so on – as well’ and discusses the importance of Watson, Crick et al’s discovery in the wider context of the life sciences. However, he expresses concern at the purely intellectual and abstract nature of Watson’s work, with little practical familiarity with experimental material: ‘There is no evidence in the book that Jim Watson had ever seen any DNA, let alone started with ten pounds of liver, or whatever, and prepared it. It’s as though one wrote an account of the life of a musician who never did any practice.’

Waddington was certainly not one to mince his words, either in public reviews or private correspondence. This can also be seen in his 1974 correspondence (ref: GB 237 Coll-41/5/3/2) with Francis Crick, who was at this time working in the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge. What is particularly interesting about this correspondence is the spirited intellectual discussion – and disagreement – between the two scientists. Crick wrote to Waddington on 6 June 1974 asking Waddington to clarifiy some aspects of his ‘epigenetic landscape’, which Waddington had first proposed in 1957 as a way of visualising the development of a cell or group of cells in an embryo. He depicts the cell/s as a ball rolling down the ‘landscape’ and facing several ‘choices’ as to which way to go – just as the developing embryo is influenced down certain ‘paths’ by various genetic and environmental factors. In his letter, Crick admits to some difficulty in grasping exactly what certain aspects of the landscape might represent.

Waddington’s three-page reply to Crick is more than a little prickly, claiming that ‘it is a very simple and perfectly clear idea.’ Crick retorts on 28 June by stating that the concept seems ‘so vague as to be useless’ and that he would envisage the ball as ‘the lineage of a single cell of the adult animal’ rather than Waddington’s conception of it as ‘cell, tissue or pattern.’ Two weeks later, Waddington writes from his Italian holiday home that Crick seemed to ‘make such heavy weather of grasping the point’; the landscape model should not be applied to every dynamic system and the ball could represent either a single cell or a group of specialised cells. However, this reply still does not satisfy Crick. ‘It was nice of you to write at such length especially when you were on holiday’, he begins on 30 July. However, while the epigenetic landscape ‘may have been a useful idea in the Thirties’, Crick suspects that ‘it has long outlived its usefulness.’ Waddington has still not addressed his main issue, which is that the ball must represent a single cell in order to make sense, as the fertilised egg, ‘where it should all start’, after all is only one cell. His advice to Waddington about his idea? ‘Throw it away and start again!’

Almost a month later and back in Edinburgh, Waddington exasperatedly responds that ‘I should not leave you talking such nonsense without putting some reply on record’. As for the ball having to represent a single cell, he exclaims ‘for Heaven’s sake, why [?]’ He suspects Crick’s problem is his preoccupation with labelling single cells, tracing clonal descendants and ‘desperately – and not very successfully – looking for some questions that technique can answer. It’s your choice to follow that lead.’

Crick’s final reply in September 1974 is conciliatory: ‘Peace! Peace! I really am trying to get the most of your epigenetic landscape even if at times my manner gets a bit too brisk.’ He suggests that the two meet and discuss the matter face to face later in the year – an occasion where being a fly on the wall would have been quite enlightening!

Clare Button
Project Archivist

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A Spring Time Natural History

Maybe it is this lovely spring weather that has got me thinking about the wonderful books on Natural History in our Collections. Perhaps the most notable of which is  The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, Vol.II, 1846 by John James Audubon. Famed for his fine artistry, life-like poses and inclusion of habitats, this naturalist was regularly quoted by such towering figures as Darwin. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_James_Audubon

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Darwin himself edited several volumes, documenting The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle.  Including Pt.2: Mammalia by George R. Waterhouse. http://darwin-online.org.uk/EditorialIntroductions/Freeman_ZoologyOfBeagle.html

Heiskell Darwin

One original we have completed in its entirety is the book by Edinburgh’s own James Wilson, Illustrations of Zoology. Surely this is the next candidate to be converted into the book reader format? Here you can see ‘The Great White Dolphin’ (Beluga) drawn by Patrick Syme and engraved by W.H. Lizars. James Wilson tells us that ‘For three months in 1815 a White Whale was observed to inhabit the Firth (‘Frith’) of Forth’. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Wilson_%28zoologist%29

0010939d Another of my favourites is the Herbal De Historia Stirpium, 1542 by Fuchs – the man who gave his name to the flower Fuchsia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonhart_Fuchs  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Historia_Stirpium_Commentarii_Insignes

0004715dAnd who could fail to love this frog from Catesby’s Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands, Vol.2? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Catesby

0004145dOr miss the delicate beauty in the fronds of Hypnum preserved in the Album of Scottish Mosses, circa 1828? 

Hypnum

There are many more fantastic images from our Natural History  books, a few of which can be found by clicking the links below

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/53rp26

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/0k34v5

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/tpyco9

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/o4o18h

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/76u9v5

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/043m5r

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/kf35cx

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/6t7y00

http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/2ly37c

After all this, I recommend a walk through one of Edinburgh’s many parks to see a bit of nature on your doorstep!

Susan Pettigrew, Photographer

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Using an electronic lab notebook to deposit data into Edinburgh DataShare

This is heads up about a ‘coming attraction’.  For the past several months a group at Research Space has been working with the DataShare team, including Robin Rice and George Hamilton, to make it possible to deposit research data from our new RSpace electronic notebook into DataShare.

I gave the first public preview of this integration last month in a presentation called Electronic lab notebooks and data repositories:  Complementary responses to the scientific data problem  to a session on Research Data and Electronic Lab Notebooks at the American Chemical Society conference in Dallas.

When the RSpace ELN becomes available to researchers at Edinburgh later this spring, users of RSpace will be able to make deposits to DataShare directly from RSpace using a simple interface we have built into RSpace.  The whole process only takes a few clicks, and starts with selecting records to be deposited into DataShare and clicking on the DataShare button as illustrated in the following screenshot:b2_workspaceHighlightedYou are then asked to enter some information about the deposit:

c2_datashareDialogFilledAfter confirming a few details about the deposit, the data is deposited directly into DataShare, and information about the deposit appears in DataShare.

h2_viewInDatashare2We will provide details about how to sign up for an RSpace account in a future post later in the spring.  In the meantime, I’d like to thank Robin and George for working with us at RSpace on this exciting project.  As far as we know this is the first time an electronic lab notebook has ever been integrated with an institutional data repository, so this is a pioneering and very exciting experiment!  We hope to use it as a model for similar integrations with other institutional and domain-specific repositories.

Rory MacNeil
Chief Executive, Research Space

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Trial access to BiblioRossica available

IF

BiblioRossica is a portal for academics and scholars that offers expertly selected collections devoted to the most relevant areas of modern Russian, Jewish, Eastern European and Eurasian Humanities.

As an ebook platform it offers over 10,000 scholarly publications, mostly in Russian, from leading Russian academic presses, including NLO, Indrik, OGI, and Nestor-Istoriia, as well as recent English publications in Russian, Slavic, and Jewish studies from Academic Studies Press and Central European University Press. Subjects cover political and social science, linguistics, literature, art, history, philosophy and religion.

You can access BiblioRossica during the trial period from www.ed.ac.uk/is/databases-trials

There is a feedback form available and we would welcome feedback as this a key part of making a case to subscribe to resources like this.

Caroline Stirling – Academic Support Librarian for Social and Political Science

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Digital Preservation Training Programme: London (7-9 April 2014)

The University of London Computer Centre (ULCC) recently ran its award-winning Digital Preservation Training Programme and I was fortunate enough to win a scholarship from the Digital Preservation Coalition to attend. I joined delegates from a diverse range of organisations including the British Library and GlaxoSmithKline as well as attendees who had travelled from the European Central Bank in Frankfurt and the Universite de Lausanne, Switzerland.

Aimed at professionals working in the varied field of digital preservation, the content and structure of the course was based on the Open Archival Information System (OAIS) model for ingesting, storing and making accessible the content of digital archives.

The OAIS reference model

The OAIS reference model

The programme provided detailed analysis of each of the steps involved, described the roles of different actors and gave an introduction to a number of invaluable digital preservation tools, approaches and assessment systems. As well as this, modules covered more general, but related, areas such as XML, metadata and costs and risk management.

As a relatively new member of staff at the University, for which digital preservation is an important process, I found my attendance on the course incredibly valuable. As well as improving my knowledge of the intellectual processes behind digital archiving activity, I was also able to apply this to real-life organisations through practical and group discussion activities: the final class assessment required delegates to analyse an existing archive, map its workflow to the OAIS model and undertake a gap analysis to see where improvements could be made.

I learned a lot by sharing experiences with other attendees and hearing how their institutions approached digital preservation. As a result, I now feel in a strong position to contribute to the University’s continued work in developing its digital preservation and digital asset management strategies.

Gavin Willshaw, Digital Curator

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Index Religiosus Online now on trial

Index ReligiosusNew on trial for University of Edinburgh users from 10 April to 11 May 2013 is the Index Religiosus Online.

The Index Religiosus replaces the bibliography of the Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique and of the ‘Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses’ (Elenchus Bibliographicus). These two tools are internationally recognized as essential working instruments for Theology and Religious Studies.

As a key reference bibliography for Theology, Religious Studies and Church History, it includes publications written in multiple European languages (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch), and enables users to export records in several formats (EndNote, Refworks, Zotero, etc.)

From January 2014 onwards, the printed version of the bibliography of the Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique and the Elenchus Bibliographicus will no longer be available.

You can access the trial via the link at : http://www.ed.ac.uk/is/databases-trials. Please give us your feedback as this is a key part of making a case to subscribe to resources like this.

Christine Love-Rodgers, Academic Support Librarian – School of Divinity

 

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How can you improve your data management skills?

A range of training courses on research data management (RDM) in the form of half-day courses and seminars have been created to help you with research data management issues, and are now available for booking on the MyEd booking system:

  • Research Data Management Programme at the University of Edinburgh
  • Good practice in research data management
  • Creating a data management plan for your grant application
  • Handling data using SPSS (based on the MANTRA module)
  • Handling data with ArcGIS (based on the MANTRA module)

RDM trainingThese courses and seminars aim to equip researchers, postgraduate research students and research support staff with a grounded understanding in data management issues and data handling.

If you manage research data, provide support for research, or are interested in finding out more about efficient and effective ways of managing your research data these course will be for you.

For detailed information about these courses please go to: http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/information-services/research-support/data-management/rdm-training

We are also happy to arrange tailored sessions for researchers and research support staff in aspects of research data management from planning through to depositing.  Please contact us at IS.Helpline@ed.ac.uk if you would like to arrange a training session.

Cuna Ekmekcioglu
Senior Research Data Officer
Library & University Collections, IS

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Trial access to online Human Relations Area Files – World Cultures & Archaeology

World CulturesTrial access is available until 24 May for University of Edinburgh users to eHRAF  – the online database of Human Relations Area Files (HRAF), a non-profit research organization at Yale University. This database covers:

*   Ethnographic materials on all aspects of cultural and social life
*   Western & non-Western cultures, ethnic minorities, indigenous people, and archaeological traditions
*   Subject indexing at the paragraph-level for efficient retrieval of information

The companion database eHRAF Archaeology focuses on in-depth descriptive documents of archaeological traditions from around the world.

Support materials  are available at http://hraf.yale.edu/resources/guides.

Access the trial via the link at : http://www.ed.ac.uk/is/databases-trials. Please give us your feedback as this is a key part of making a case to subscribe to resources like this.

Christine Love-Rodgers, Academic Support Librarian – Social & Political ScienceArchaeology

 

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New Images & New Collection Publically Available

Last week we were very pleased to make 864 new images available to the public. In the DIU we had recently completed a batch of nearly 1000 high quality images from Readers Orders and Staff requests, so we handed these over to Library Digital Development Team to upload into LUNA http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/ . Of the images that could be made available to the public…

372 Images were added to the Western Medieval Manuscripts Collection

0055682d196 Images were added to the CRC Gallimaufry Collection

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162 Images were added to the New College Collection

54 Images were added to the Roslin Institute Collection

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11 Images were added to the Architectural Drawings Collection

10 Images were added to the Salvesen Collection

10 Images were added to the University of Edinburgh Collection and

8 Images were added to the Incunabula Collection

0055707dHowever, we are perhaps most excited to announce the new collection of ECA Rare Books http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/luna/servlet/s/j8mxaj . Elizabeth Quarmby Lawrence has been very busy cataloguing these books (see our earlier post https://libraryblogs.is.ed.ac.uk/diu/2013/10/16/gems-from-the-eca-rare-books-collection/ ) and tells us that the “Rare Books Collection of Edinburgh College of Art, includes about 1,500 items, which date from before 1489 to the twentieth century. Most of them are printed books; many of them are illustrated. It is particularly strong in books of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries on architecture, design and ornament. There are also nineteenth-century photographs, examples of textile design, and early nineteenth-century hand-painted designs for Edinburgh Shawls. Many of the books originated in the collections of the institutions which preceded ECA: the drawing academy of the Board of Trustees for Manufactures in Scotland, and the School of Applied Art. This collection is now housed in the Centre for Research Collections in the Main Library”.

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Making new images available requires a real team effort, and I’d like to say a special thanks to Deputy Photographer Malcolm Brown, Scott Renton & all the Library Digital Development Team, and of course Elizabeth Quarmby Lawrence for all the metadata!

Susan Pettigrew, Photographer

Posted in Archive Collections, Art Collections, Edinburgh College of Art, LLC general, Manuscript Collections, News, School of History, Classics and Archaeology | Comments Off on New Images & New Collection Publically Available

Alan Davie 1920 – 2014

We were very sad to hear the news about the death of Edinburgh College of Art (ECA) alumnus and fellow, Alan Davie. The close connection between Davie and ECA over the decades can be seen throughout our collections and so we’ve compiled a selection of images to celebrate his work and life.

From the presentation speech when Davie was awarded his Honorary Fellowship of ECA at Dovecot Studios in 2004:

Alan Davie’s art is inspired by his insatiable curiosity concerning a whole range of different aspects of our world – from ancient and non-western cultures to modern philosophical and psychological ideas on the nature of human life and society. Furthermore, within his own spheres of creativity he has shown himself to be a truly multi-faceted practitioner by excelling, not only in his art, but also in his poetry, his highly-admired musical composition and performance, as well as in his own illuminating and impassioned writings on what it means to be an artist. We must remember, however, that for Alan these creative achievements are just part of a whole kaleidoscope of other various activities – such as flying, sailing, scuba-diving and gardening which have also been an essential part of Alan’s joy in life. Few would challenge the resounding statement which Alan made at the end of a talk he gave at the University of Edinburgh in 1992:

I am totally involved in the state of TRUE LIVING

I AM LIFE’

(c) Alan Davie; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

Alan Davie, Kaleidoscope for a Parrot (1966). Oil on canvas. Donated by the artist in 1998. University of Edinburgh Art Collection

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Alan Davie’s ECA Student Record. Edinburgh College of Art Archive.

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Letter from ECA Principal, Hubert Wellington, to Davie when he was on active service in the Second World War. Edinburgh College of Art Archive.

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