 We're here at the Lewester T. Mertz Library of the New York Botanical Garden for a Wikipedia adedathon entitled Plants and People with the focus on women in science. So we are creating and enhancing articles for female ethnobotanists, female plant taxonomists, and female plant collectors. The New York Botanical Garden is one of the premier botanical research institutes in the world. There are three main collections, the library collection, the herbarium collection, which is approximately eight million dried plant specimens used for botanical research, and then the living collections, which are the plants that you see when you're walking around the ground. And the living collections are used in research projects that certain garden scientists are undertaking. I'm studying the history of botany in the Russian Empire in the 18th century. I've been really impressed by the Russian contributors to Russian Wikipedia pages. They're devoted. They are expert. I've never edited a Wikipedia page before, so I thought I might come and learn how to do that. So I went over to her English Wikipedia page, which only basically had this much information in it. I'm writing a page, a Wikipedia page, on Emma Lucy Braun, and she was a botanist who lived in Cincinnati. So then I just go and look over her Wikipedia page, and I look at the little section in the reference books that they have, and I just fill in the gaps there. Today I'm writing a Wikipedia page about the botanist Anna Murray-Vail. And it's so fun because when I looked at this first, there were maybe five papers written by her, and I found dozens of others, and now there are like 30 written by her. And I also found a picture of her, and there wasn't one before. The Wikipedia community is wonderful. They're very supportive of initiatives and editathons that help to bring the special collections of different institutions to the public through the vehicle of Wikipedia.