Field work is the process of observing and collecting data about people, cultures, and natural environments. Field work is conducted in the wild of our everyday surroundings rather than in the semi-controlled environments of a lab or classroom. This allows researchers to collect data about the dynamic places, people, and species around them. Field work enables students and researchers to examine the way scientific theories interact with real life.
Field work is important in both the social and natural sciences. Social sciences, such as economics or history, focus on people, culture, and society. Natural sciences, such as biology or chemistry, focus on physical characteristics of nature and natural environments.
Social Science
In anthropology, a researcher may do ethnographic field work, studying and describing the customs of different communities and cultures.
Ethnographic field work dramatically changed the purpose and methods of anthropology. Early anthropologists collected ethnographic data from outside sources, usually leaders of the group they were studying, and then compared it to their theories. With this information, anthropologists tried to explain the origins of the cultures customs.
By the early 20th century, however, anthropologists began to spend long periods of time in a particular community or geographic area. Rather than relying on outside sources, the anthropologists themselves recorded the activities and customs of local people. They listened to the peoples stories and participated in daily events. Anthropologists became active field workers, experiencing the everyday life of their subjects in order to explain the purpose of local institutions and cultural beliefs and practices.
The National Geographic Society supports a variety of social science researchers and projects that use field work as a method of collecting data. One of National Geographics Explorers-in-Residence, Dr. Wade Davis, is an ethnobotanist. An ethnobotanist is someone who studies how different cultures understand and use plants as food, medicine, and in religious ceremonies. Davis spent more than three years in Latin America collecting and studying the plants that different indigenous groups use in their daily lives.
Field work can be conducted by groups of people as well as one individual. Participants in National Geographics Enduring Voices Project conduct field work by visiting and documenting areas of the world where indigenous languages are in danger of becoming extinct. Field workers in the Enduring Voices Project have recorded indigenous languages in places as diverse as Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, and Siberia.
Davis and the Enduring Voices Project use field work to document and preserve local knowledge so we may all better understand the diversity of human experiences around the globe.
Natural Science
Field work is also used to understand how natural environments function. A researcher in the field of ecology, for example, may conduct field work to understand how specific organisms, such as plants and animals, relate to one another and to their physical surroundings.
The work of Charles Darwin on the Galapagos Islands is an important example of field work in the natural sciences. After observing that finch populations on different islands had different types of beaks, Darwin theorized that each type of beak was adapted to the birds environment and diet. These observations, along with many others made on his voyage around South America, would lead Darwin to propose his theory of evolution by natural selection, a pillar of modern biology.
A number of National Geographic-supported researchers and projects conduct field work to better understand Earths natural environments. Dr. Jenny Daltry, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer in 2005, is a herpetologist, someone who studies reptiles and amphibians. Daltry has traveled to remote regions of Cambodia and the Caribbean, observing and documenting rare species such as the Siamese crocodile and the Antiguan racer snake, known as the rarest snake in the world. She spent more than 400 nights camping on the Caribbean island of Antigua in order to understand the snakes' habitat, behavior, and predators. Daltrys field work helped establish the Antiguan Racer Conservation Project, which has successfully reintroduced the snake into the wild.
A field work team from the Ocean Now project, supported by National Geographic, is studying and cataloguing information about healthy coral reef ecosystems. They are doing research in the Southern Line Islands, a remote island chain in the central Pacific Ocean. The project aims to better understand how healthy reefs function in order to help conserve reefs that have been endangered by human activity and climate change.
Field work in the natural sciences, like that conducted by Daltry and the Ocean Now project, document the importance, complexity, and fragility of Earths natural environments.
Scientists root out the data from trees in the field.
Photograph by James P. Blair
Field Work, One Cubic Foot at a Time
Photographer David Liittschwager crafted a 1-square-foot metal cube and placed it in a range of ecosystemsland and water, tropical and temperate, freshwater and marine. Over several weeks at each location, Liittschwager and a team of biologists found, identified, and photographed small creatures that passed through the cube. The result of their field work is an inventory of ecosystem diversity at our planet's surface and just below. The photos of these smaller, often unseen, species are showcased in the February 2010 issue of National Geographic magazine.
adapt
Verb
to adjust to new surroundings or a new situation.
amphibian
Noun
an animal able to live both on land and in water.
anthropologist
Noun
person who studies cultures and characteristics of communities and civilizations.
Antiguan racer
Noun
endangered species of snake found on the island of Antigua.
beak
Noun
hard, protruding jaws of a bird.
behavior
Noun
anything an organism does involving action or response to stimulation.
biologist
Noun
scientist who studies living organisms.
biology
Noun
study of living things.
chemistry
Noun
study of the atoms and molecules that make up different substances.
community
Noun
group of organisms or a social group interacting in a specific region under similar environmental conditions.
complex
Adjective
complicated.
Noun
management of a natural resource to prevent exploitation, destruction, or neglect.
coral reef
Noun
rocky ocean features made up of millions of coral skeletons.
cultural belief
Noun
faith or custom created and supported by a community's traditional behavior.
Noun
learned behavior of people, including their languages, belief systems, social structures, institutions, and material goods.
custom
Noun
a way of doing things that has been handed down from one generation to the next.
data
Plural Noun
(singular: datum) information collected during a scientific study.
dynamic
Adjective
always changing or in motion.
Noun
branch of biology that studies the relationship between living organisms and their environment.
economics
Noun
study of monetary systems, or the creation, buying, and selling of goods and services.
ecosystem diversity
Noun
number of ecosystems present in a specific area.
Enduring Voices Project
Noun
research project focused on studying, documenting, and preserving endangered languages.
environment
Noun
conditions that surround and influence an organism or community.
ethnobotanist
Noun
person who studies how plants are used in different cultures for food, medicine, rituals, clothing, construction, etc.
ethnographic
Adjective
having to do with the study of individual cultures and customs.
evolution
Noun
change in heritable traits of a population over time.
extinct
Adjective
no longer existing.
finch
Noun
small, common bird.
Noun
material, usually of plant or animal origin, that living organisms use to obtain nutrients.
fragile
Noun
delicate or easily broken.
freshwater
Noun
water that is not salty.
Noun
environment where an organism lives throughout the year or for shorter periods of time.
herpetologist
Noun
person who studies reptiles.
history
Noun
study of the past.
institution
Noun
established organization or set of organizing principles.
inventory
Verb
to list or evaluate.
lab
Noun
(laboratory) place where scientific experiments are performed.
language
Noun
set of sounds, gestures, or symbols that allows people to communicate.
marine
Adjective
having to do with the ocean.
medicine
Noun
substance used for treating illness or disease.
National Geographic Society
Noun
(1888) organization whose mission is "Inspiring people to care about the planet."
natural science
Noun
study that focuses on physicial characteristics, nature, and natural environments.
Noun
process by which organisms that are better -adapted to their environments produce more offspring to transmit their genetic characteristics.
observe
Verb
to watch.
organism
Noun
living or once-living thing.
origin
Noun
source or ancestry.
particular
Adjective
unique or special.
physical characteristic
Noun
physical feature of an organism or object.
pillar
Noun
a structure used for support.
plant
Noun
organism that produces its own food through photosynthesis and whose cells have walls.
predator
Noun
animal that hunts other animals for food.
process
Noun
natural or human actions that create and change the Earths features.
propose
Verb
to present an idea for consideration.
purpose
Noun
goal or aim.
relate
Verb
to interact with or respond to.
religious ceremony
Noun
rituals performed surrounding spiritual or supernatural beliefs.
rely
Verb
to depend on.
remote
Adjective
distant or far away.
reptile
Noun
animal that breathes air and usually has scales.
Siamese crocodile
Noun
freshwater reptile native to southeast Asia.
social science
Noun
study that focuses on people, culture, and society.
society
Noun
large community, linked through similarities or relationships.
temperate
Adjective
moderate.
theorize
Verb
to formulate and propose a group of ideas to explain a scientific question.
theory
Noun
explanation that has not been proven as fact.
tropical
Adjective
existing in the tropics, the latitudes between the Tropic of Cancer in the north and the Tropic of Capricorn in the south.
variety
Noun
diversity or many different types.
voyage
Noun
long journey or trip.
Wade Davis
Noun
(1953present) Canadian anthropologist and ethnobotanist.