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This story was originally published in the Fall 2024 edition of SDSU Magazine.

 

First-year master’s student Alyssa Head, pictured here, works with assistant professor Kinsey Brock in the reptiles and amphibians collection. They are endeavoring to make all of the specimens searchable via digitization. Photograph by Matt Furman

First-year master’s student Alyssa Head, pictured here, works with assistant professor Kinsey Brock in the reptiles and amphibians collection. They are endeavoring to make all of the specimens searchable via digitization. Photograph by Matt Furman

 

Following a path outlined by railroad tracks, Marshal Hedin found himself deep inside a dark, cramped tunnel in a remote part of North Carolina. He examined the sides of the tunnel and, with the aid of a headlamp, spotted what he came looking for. Suddenly, he heard a whistle in the distance. The sound echoed through the hollow cavity, a warning that grew louder as the ground began to tremble. In a split second, Hedin pressed himself against the curved wall of the tunnel, motionless as the train barreled by. He clutched a precious vial in his hand.

The veteran field researcher quite often finds himself in precarious situations such as this. He braves each bold adventure with the same seemingly simple goal: to find spiders.

Hedin is a biology professor who joined the faculty of the College of Sciences in 1999. A year ago, he took on the role of director of SDSU’s Biodiversity Museum, a veritable natural history museum that houses more than 100,000 specimens that have been collected and acquired over the past 127 years. While Hedin’s speciality is arachnids, the museum’s shelves, drawers, cabinets and even ultracold freezers are filled with plants, insects, birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians from around the world.

Read about the museum in the latest edition of SDSU Magazine.

 

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