A summer in the Smithsonian
Bloomsburg
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It鈥檚 a popular summer destination for tourists, but for one recent Bloomsburg University graduate it was simply the next step of her career pursuit.
Keara Drummer, a graduate student pursuing her masters in biology, is no stranger to museums and paleontology studies. During her time as an undergraduate at Bloomsburg University, she interned with the American Museum of Natural History where she had the opportunity to work with Invertebrate Paleontology Collections. This summer at the Smithsonian, she had the opportunity to build upon her pre-existing knowledge.
鈥淢y first internship was what I鈥檝e been doing as an undergraduate collections assistant,鈥 Drummer said. 鈥淭he second internship was to get new skills in collections management. Conservation is inherently a large part of taking care of collections. Therefore, a set of skills I most definitely need to be a successful museum collections manager somewhere.鈥
Under the instruction of conservation specialist, Cathy Hawk, Drummer spent this past summer as a conservation intern working with a variety of specimen types including the new t-rex exhibit.
鈥淢y favorite experience was helping with the photo documentation of the new 鈥淣ation鈥檚 T rex鈥 for the new Deep Time fossil hall exhibit coming summer 2019,鈥 Drummer said. 鈥淚 got to hold and touch a Tyrannosaurus Rex and work and learn from one of the most influential natural history conservators in the world, Cathy Hawks.鈥
According to Drummer, the insight she gained this summer will carry into her graduate studies and potentially her future career.
鈥淭he knowledge gained about NMNH (National Museum of Natural History) itself and the conservations and collections skills I鈥檝e learned and the networking I did this past summer is something I am thankful for every day,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 learned a lot about wet specimen and their care/needs. I am bringing that knowledge back to Bloom for their Biological Teaching Collections and the Paleontology Teaching Collections.鈥
Although most of her summers were spent working with paleontology, Drummer plans to focus on her degree in biology.
鈥淚 never wanted to go into paleontology specifically, but I wanted to work with collections of any variety,鈥 Drummer stated. 鈥淚 want to become a museum collections manager, scientist, specialist, etc. I like paleontology, but I鈥檓 at Bloom still to obtain a MS in Biology to make myself more marketable for other natural history collections (ornithology, entomology, invertebrate zoology, mammals, Invertebrate paleontology, vertebrate paleontology, etc).Who knows, maybe I鈥檒l end up as a paleontology collections manager? But, I鈥檓 just going where the wind takes me. I鈥檓 pretty open to any genre of natural history if it includes caring for a collection.鈥