Each December, thousands swap wrapping paper for binoculars and step outside for a different kind of holiday tradition: the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. Instead of hunting for bargains, they hunt for birds—with pencils, rather than pellets. Started in 1900 by ornithologist Frank M. Chapman, the count offered a peaceful alternative to the Christmas "side hunts," where people competed to shoot the most animals. Chapman had a better idea: count them instead. Over a century later, that simple shift has grown into the world"s longest-running citizen-science project.
Audubon Christmas Bird Count
Today in History
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World Environment Day
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Death Valley National Park, California
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Welcome to the Ring of Fire
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Summer winds down in the Hamptons
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Arrr! Can you talk like a pirate?
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Negratín Reservoir, Granada, Spain
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The view will stop you in your tracks
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Grasmere, Lake District, Cumbria, England
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World Wildlife Day
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Let s get lost
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Where the bearded reedling sings
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Bản Giốc–Detian Falls, Vietnam
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International Talk Like a Pirate Day
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A fortress in the sky
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World Turtle Day
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Mercury in retrograde
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Welcome to the Alien Egg Hatchery
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Aqueduct, Arkadia Park, Poland
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Corfe gets creepy
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Art abounds at the Palais Garnier
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Christmas star lanterns, Germany
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Happy Cinco de Mayo!
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Wildebeest on the move
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Hitsujiyama Park, Saitama Prefecture, Japan
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