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  2. Ludwig Koch (sound recordist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_Koch_(sound_recordist)

    In 1936, Songs of Wild Birds was published, followed by two other sound-books by 1938 (More Songs of Wild Birds in 1937 & Animal Language in 1938). In 1937 he made recordings of the birds in the park of the royal castle in La(e)ken (Belgium) with the aid of queen Elisabeth of Belgium. These recordings were published only in 1952, due to the ...

  3. Xeno-canto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xeno-canto

    xeno-canto is a citizen science project and repository in which volunteers record, upload and annotate recordings of bird calls and sounds of orthoptera and bats. [2] Since it began in 2005, it has collected over 575,000 sound recordings from more than 10,000 species worldwide, and has become one of the biggest collections of bird sounds in the world. [1]

  4. Eric Simms (ornithologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Simms_(ornithologist)

    As a guest on Desert Island Discs in 1976, one of his eight choices was a recording of a blackbird he had made near his London home. [2] He narrated the 1972 BBC LP "A Year's Journey" (catalogue number RED135M), which was subtitled "Wildlife recordings from the BBC TV Series for schools".

  5. Lyrebird makes amazing laser sounds - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-11-10-lyrebird-makes...

    The lyrebird is an Australian species best known for its ability to mimic man-made sounds. National Geographic has recorded these remarkable birds mimicking such unnatural noises as a chainsaw and ...

  6. Digital sound archives can bring extinct birds (briefly) back ...

    www.aol.com/news/digital-sound-archives-bring...

    Colorized version of a 1935 photo of a male ivory-billed woodpecker, now believed to be extinct. Photographed by Arthur A. Allen. Forestry Images/Wikipedia, CC BYWhen people think of extinct ...

  7. Macaulay Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macaulay_Library

    Arthur Augustus Allen and Peter Paul Kellogg made the first recordings of bird sound on May 18, 1929, in an Ithaca park. They used motion-picture film with synchronized sound to record a song sparrow, a house wren, and a rose-breasted grosbeak. This was the Beginning of Cornell Library of Natural Sounds.

  8. Natural sounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_sounds

    The historical background of natural sounds as they have come to be defined, begins with the recording of a single bird, by Ludwig Koch, as early as 1889.Koch's efforts in the late 19th and early 20th centuries set the stage for the universal audio capture model of single-species—primarily birds at the outset—that subsumed all others during the first half of the 20th century and well into ...

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