Dear Colleagues,

I would like to draw your attention to a large archive of bioacoustic
recordings, primarily of Northern Resident Orca Whales (Killer Whales), but
also consisting of other whales, dolphins and marine mammals, called "The
Orchive" which can be accessed at: http://orchive.cs.uvic.ca

 It contains approximately 20,000 hours of recordings, recorded at OrcaLab (
http://orcalab.org) a land based research station founded by Dr. Paul
Spong.  Our lab at the University of Victoria in collaboration with OrcaLab
has digitized all the tape recordings and have made them available for
access by the scientific community at http://orchive.cs.uvic.ca.

You can also download all the recordings directly from
http://data.orchive.net in raw 44.1kHz .wav format.  This collection of
recordings is over 9 terabytes in size, and all recordings can be
downloaded in their full raw format.

In addition, we have a number of other scientific resources available for
this dataset, including a full call catalogue based on Dr. John Ford's
Northern Resident call catalogue.  We have also scanned approximately
30,000 lab book pages containing a considerable amount of behavioural and
acoustic information entered by the researchers at OrcaLab.  These can be
accessed through the Orchive website.

In addition, using the Orchive Interface, 10 scientists and volunteers have
made approximately 17,000 annotations of different vocalizations, these
annotations are also available for direct download at
http://data.orchive.net

I just recently defended my Ph.D. in Computer Science with the subject
being the Orchive, in which I describe a computer based system I developed
for the annotation and analysis of these vocalizations. I present results
on audio feature extraction and machine learning classification of these
vocalizations and show that using advanced algorithms, we can classify orca
vocalizations with good accuracy.  You can access my Ph.D. thesis at:
https://dspace.library.uvic.ca/handle/1828/5109

If you have any questions about this project, or need help in accessing our
data, please feel free to contact me at [email protected]

Best regards,
Steven Ness.

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