PR for People Monthly October 2019 | Page 3

The MML Library offers a deep dive into marine mammal research. If you want to take the plunge into research about marine mammals, there may be no better place to go than the Marine Mammal Laboratory Library, a resource that is part of the network of libraries operating under the aegis of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The Library is literally crammed with materials on cetaceans (whales, dolphins, porpoises), pinnipeds (seals, sea lions, walrus), and sirenians (manatees and dugongs), as well as sea otters, polar bears, seabirds (including penguins) and sea turtles. There are dissertations on marine mammal research, journals, NOAA publication series, and books – including a large collection donated by Dr. Victor Scheffer, a University of Washington professor who had the distinction of chairing the initial U.S. Marine Mammal Commission from 1973-1976.

The MML Library also provides access to archives of northern fur seal research, International Whaling Commission documents and International North Pacific Fisheries Commission documents. It offers a growing trove of materials on conservation, ecosystem dynamics, fisheries management, statistical methods, and zoology, as well as on international and domestic legislation and treaties that impact marine mammals.

A large card catalog has pride of place in the center of the Library. It holds records from the early days up through 1994. And displayed atop this handsome relic is a relic of another kind: a gray whale lower jawbone that was discovered amidst jetsam washed up on an Alaskan island. Another one of the library’s treasures is a copy of the lavishly illustrated 19th century work written by van Beneden and Gervais, Ostéographie des Cétacés, vivants et fossiles (“The Osteology of Cetaceans, Living and Fossil”).

The Marine Mammal Laboratory Library is staffed weekdays from 7:30 AM – 4 PM, and is open to the general public by appointment - contact the Library at [email protected] or 206-526-4013. This is not a lending library, but there are reading nooks and ample desks to accommodate visitors who wish to peruse some of the Library’s 15,000+ collection materials and resources onsite.

The MML Library is housed on NOAA’s Seattle campus, located at 7600 Sand Point Way NE in Seattle. As a federal facility, the campus has had heightened security in place since the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001. That means you will need an enhanced driver’s license or passport to be permitted onto the campus, then a guard at the security booth will direct you to the building that houses the Library.

Marine Mammal Laboratory Library

Library Hours are 7:30am to 4pm, Monday to Friday

You must call ahead or send email to make an appointment!

206-526-4013

[email protected]

The key to understanding people and the world around us begins with education. One way to learn about the world is by developing a love of books. Each month, we profile a library. Large, small, urban, rural, post-modern, quaint or neo-classic; do you have a library that you love? Tell us about it. This month, Barbara Lloyd McMichael writes about writes about the Seattle-based National Marine Mammals Laboratory-Western Region that has an excellent library to do research on orcas, as well as many other marine mammals.

Libraries We Love:

The Marine Mammal Library – A Deep Dive into Research

By Barbara Lloyd McMichael