
Dr. Mary Sunderland served as graduate student coordinator for the first three years of the Embryo Project, working on articles, helping to design the database, and serving as the connection between the project team and the library. She received a Master’s degree from the University of Toronto carrying out stem cell research, then wrote her dissertation on the history of regeneration studies.
Mary received her Ph.D. from our Biology and Society Program in December 2008, and she now has an exciting position as postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Berkeley. She is putting her research and management expertise from the Embryo Project to work there. Congratulations Mary!

The Embryo Project is committed to open standards and thus makes use of open-source technologies to store, manage, and disseminate its digital content — encyclopedic entries and scholarly interpretive essays, digital images, timeline visualizations, and videos. The Project is part of a large and growing community of educational, research, and government institutions that utilize the Fedora repository system.
In conjunction with the ASU Library, the MBL, and the Max-Planck Institute for the History of Science, the Embryo Project is developing not only a repository of digital objects centered around embryo research, but also new solutions to bridging the divide between traditional scholarship in the humanities and the explosion of information in the digital world.

Evolutionary Developmental Biology has been a major transformation of the conceptual framework of developmental biology over the last four decades. Several members of our research team have actively contributed to this example of scientific change, starting with a Dibner seminar in 2001 that led to a book edited by Jane Maienschein and Manfred Laubichler. This project continues to document and analyze the history of this ongoing transformation of developmental biology.