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FieldKit's History and Future

A project log for FieldKit

Environmental sensing for everyone.

shah-selbeShah Selbe 08/08/2018 at 22:570 Comments

Botswana's Okavango Delta is one of the most incredible places on this planet. Named a UNESCO World Heritage site for it's biological diversity, the Delta is a pristine habitat for all the charismatic megafauna that subsaharan Africa is known for: elephants, hippos, lions, giraffes, and more. It is one of the most incredible places that I have ever been and the need to monitor and protect it has never been more necessary. It was in this magical place where FieldKit was born, with support by the National Geographic Society

FieldKit was inspired by a collaboration between National Geographic Explorers Shah Selbe, Steve Boyes, and Jer Thorp. Steve was conducting biodiversity surveys of the delta from canoes year-after-year in the same old ways that scientists have done for decades (if not longer). While working in the field in Botswana, Angola and Namibia, the team realized that there were few good open source hardware and software tools that met the specific needs of field research. Not only in sensor technology but also ways to organize and visualize the data. Responding to this need, Shah and Jer began to prototype software and hardware solutions and field-tested these approaches from 2014 to 2017. 

We wanted to share the science and the story behind the expedition real-time, so anyone could join and provide insight or support. By turning Into The Okavango (ITO) into a live-data expedition, we have been able to bring thousands of people along with us on expeditions in the Okavango Delta (including an astronaut that was following along from the International Space Station). We collected, stored, and shared 40 million open data points and continuously measured ‘the heartbeat’ of this crucial ecosystem through large-scale open source sensor systems.

This experience we had with ITO was transformative, and it made us realize that we should bring these same capabilities to anyone anywhere in the world by giving them a publicly available, fully featured ITO of their own. The lessons learned and understanding that came from years of continuous field use allowed us to architect FieldKit in way that can be scaled and expanded across various users regardless of how much they know about engineering and computer science. Scientists have already been embracing social media and blogs to share their expeditions with the world visually, but there wasn't a good tool out there for them to do that same sharing scientifically. @Jacob Lewallen has been helping with the hardware and software development on a volunteer basis since the beginning, and stepped in as FieldKit's Principal Engineer at Conservify in 2017.  

We already have additional working partnerships with scientists to use FieldKit in their efforts, which include:

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