Collection management techniques used in map and geography libraries to describe and provide access to materials ensure researchers can engage with collections as viable sources of research data. Many practitioners create frameworks to market these collections as potential sources of data, whether used alone or alongside other research data. These frameworks bear similarities to the FAIR data movement, where data producers are encouraged to make their data Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable. I frame the historical landscape photograph collections of the American Geographical Society Library and the United States Geological Survey Library as FAIR research data, offering the potential to engage with trends, concerns, or concepts being explored by geographers. When highlighting the FAIRness of these collections, we have an opportunity to better understand how they may be used as standalone sources of data, as well as alongside other FAIR data sources in scientific research. As another FAIR data source, I use the DataONE Data Catalog to contextualize these photographs alongside present-day datasets from fieldwork in similar landscapes. I encourage map and geography libraries to understand how the FAIRness of their collections enable unique research opportunities, leveraging the momentum surrounding FAIR research data in open science/open research communities.
This is the preprint for the published version of this article in the Journal of Map and Geography Libraries (Taylor & Francis) available at the DOI 10.1080/15420353.2020.1817832. This record contains the Author Accepted manuscript, the figures referenced in the manuscript, and the title page with important contextual information.
Funding
National Science Foundation (NSF), award 1430508
American Geographical Society Library Fellowship, 2019
History
Publisher Statement
Under the Accepted Version [Pathway A], this preprint can be shared in an institutional repository after publication of the article, so long as the published source is acknowledged and linked to.