“Cranes migration” flickr photo by Artur Rydzewski shared under a Creative Commons (BY) license
The newly-launched Bird Migration Explorer site hosted by The Audubon Society and its partners does what it says (for North America and some parts of Latin America,, anyway – sorry, other Global friends). Using mapping and tracking techniques, the Explorer allows you to follow the migratory patterns of many birds (with more to come, apparently). The maps are like works of art, unfolding in time-lapse.
For today’s prompt, use the site (or some other) to either track a species of birds, or explore one of the maps, and then use an image of migratory patterns (perhaps through a screenshot) and make it into a work of art (perhaps through a site like LunaPic).
The Bird Migration Explorer: https://explorer.audubon.org/ (and learn more about the project: https://explorer.audubon.org/about )
This October (13-27), join the National Writing Project for Write Out 2024. Organized as a public invitation to get out and create, supported by a series of free online activities, Write Out invites educators, students, and families to explore national parks and other public spaces. The goal is to connect and learn through place-based writing and sharing. This year’s theme is Poetry For The Planet! Learn more and sign up: https://writeout.nwp.org
Post your response to @[email protected] and be sure to include the hashtag #tdc4666
This Daily Create has been recycled from previously published ones:
• #tdc3930 #ds106 Bird Migration Art #writeout (Oct 17, 2022)
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