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Author: MikeServedio

10 Hikes to Explore Our Watershed

May 5, 2022 MikeServedio Featured, Uncategorized

Get up close and personal with our watershed on these 10 hikes.

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vista looking over river with red and orange fall foliage

Five Tips and 100 Places to Inspire You to Get Outside

June 3, 2021 MikeServedio Featured, Sustainability

Getting outdoors is good for you! We’ve got 5 easy tips and 100 locations to inspire you.

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Blue recycle bins on Germantown PA street

Recycling 2021

January 6, 2021 MikeServedio Featured, Sustainability

Tips for recycling, updated for 2021.

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Late Spring Butterfly Guide

May 26, 2020 MikeServedio Entomology, Featured

Learn which butterflies to spot in our region as spring moves into summer.

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May’s Migrants

May 5, 2020 MikeServedio Birding, Featured, Ornithology

May is a great month to see migrating birds moving through our region.

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Birds Are Blooming

April 20, 2020 MikeServedio Birding, Featured, Ornithology

With spring’s arrival comes the arrival of more bird songs and brighter colors.

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Spring Butterfly Guide

April 10, 2020 MikeServedio Entomology, Featured, Photoblog

Look for these eight early spring butterflies in the Philadelphia region.

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Coming Soon to a Tree Near You

March 19, 2020 MikeServedio Birding, Featured

Birds you can expect to see in the area over the next few weeks.

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Five Easy Tips to Make your Super Bowl Party More Sustainable

January 31, 2020 MikeServedio Featured, Sustainability

A few easy tips to make your party better for the environment.

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Bugs of Bug Fest

August 6, 2019 MikeServedio Entomology, Photoblog

Just who will you meet at Bug Fest?

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🦖The oldest natural history museum in North America
🗓 Open Wednesday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
🎟 Plan your visit and save $2 on tickets at ansp.org

Academy of Natural Sciences
What IS that? This very interesting natural textur What IS that? This very interesting natural texture is found in a Byrozoan specimen from the Academy's collection. The Bryozoans first appeared during the Early Cambrian (480 Ma), and they are still present in aquatic environments; these animals form colonies that take a variety of forms as sheets, fans and bushes. ⁠
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In these fossils, each hole was occupied by one tiny animal, called zooid; how tiny? The zooids are usually no more than 0.04 inch, but the colonies can reach more than 20 inches in diameter! ⁠
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Next time you go to the ocean, pay attention to the algae and the rocks, you may find a colony of living bryozoans. ⁠
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Photos: Daouda Njie/ANS
Happy #GroundhogsDay! So, do you think Phil got it Happy #GroundhogsDay! So, do you think Phil got it right? ⁠
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Image: Pencil sketches of a groundhog by E. Stanley “Ned” Smith, self-trained artist and naturalist from Millersburg, PA, 1965. From the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University's Library and Archives.
Fly 🦅 fly! Fly 🦅 fly!
It's finally Friday! Who's down to explore the mus It's finally Friday! Who's down to explore the museum this weekend? ⁠
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p.s. Dinos After Dark is tonight! From 4-8 p.m. enjoy pay-what-you-wish admission. ⁠
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 📷 @coffeeandrainbowsprinkles - thanks for visiting and sharing your pictures.
Amazon Royal Flycatchers (Onychorhynchus coronata) Amazon Royal Flycatchers (Onychorhynchus coronata) are a common species that occur across the Amazon Rainforest. When alarmed they display a large red (males) or orange (females) crest like the ones seen here. Learn more about a recent expedition to the Amazon to research the effects bodies of water have on the genetics of various local bird species on our blog. ⁠
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📷️: Lukas Musher/ANS
The Academy's Women in Natural Sciences enrichment The Academy's Women in Natural Sciences enrichment program is now accepting nominations for the 2023 application process!⁠
Do you know a young woman currently in 8th grade who plans on attending a Philadelphia public or charter high school this fall (2023) and is interested in science exploration? Check out the link in our bio to nominate a student for WINS! Nominations are due February 15.⁠
Ready for game day 🦅⁠ Fly Eagles Fly!⁠ ⁠ Ready for game day 🦅⁠
Fly Eagles Fly!⁠
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📷️ by Academy Ornithologist Jason Weckstein
How many paleontologists does it take to move a ja How many paleontologists does it take to move a jaw? ⁠
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This mastodon jawbone (Late Pleistocene) was collected by W. Clark (1807), owned by Thomas Jefferson and was exhibited by him in the White House; now it is part of the Academy's Vertebrate Paleontology Collection. ⁠
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This fossil was part of the Exhibition Gateway to the University, and needed to go back home to the museum. Moving fossils can be both a delicate and hard task; in the pictures, you can see Ted Daeschler and Daouda Njie packing the jawbone in a special box. There is one little mistake on the box, do you notice what it is?
Dinos After Dark is back! Join us on Friday, Janua Dinos After Dark is back! Join us on Friday, January 27 from 4-8 p.m.  and enjoy pay-what-you-wish admission, a family friendly atmosphere and the Dino Drafts Beer Garden in Dinosaur Hall. ⁠
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p.s. A little bird told us this is a great date night!⁠
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At Dinos After Dark:⁠
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🐞 Explore our signature and special exhibits, including our newest exhibit Microsculpture: The Insect Portraits of Levon Biss⁠
🐅 Get an up-close look at the Academy’s dioramas from around the world⁠
🍺 Purchase drinks and food from the Academy Beer Garden: Dino Drafts⁠
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Dinos After Dark is a pay-what-you-wish event. Suggested donation is $10 per person. Link in bio to learn more!
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Recent Posts

  • Highlighting Biodiversity: Finding Frogs in the New Jersey Pine Barrens
  • Now That’s Funky! Recent Fossil Discovery Honors Academy Scientist 
  • Four Ways to Get Involved in Science!
  • Celebrating 10 Years of BEES With Department Head David Velinsky, PhD
  • Highlighting Biodiversity: Spectacular Birds and the Amazon River
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