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Rescue Archaeology
| Curating Collections | In the Lab
| See it Yourself!
Curating - Safegaurding our Treasures
Saving the archaeological past does not end with the scientific
excavation of sites, or even with writing the reports about those
sites. The objects themselves continue to tell us new things about
colonial society as new techniques for analysis are invented, and
as new researchers think of different questions to ask of the artifacts.
Periodically, this new information is communicated to the public
through Museum exhibits like this one.
None of this would be possible, however, if we did not maintain
and curate Museum collections. Most artifacts are fragile, and deteriorate
quickly unless they are kept in the proper physical conditions.
Many objects- especially those of metal or organic materials- can
be kept from further deterioration by specialized conservation treatment,
done by professional conservators. Humidity, temperature, pest control
and perhaps most importantly, acid and fume-free physical storage,
have to be maintained and monitored if the artifacts are to survive.
This is also true for the records associated with the artifacts
- field observations and notes, maps, photographs and analysis records.
One of the most important aspects of curating a collection of artifacts
is information storage and retrieval. With several million individual
items, a museum - like a library- must have a catalogue that allows
researchers to locate specific items - either ones they already
know about, or others that they would like to know about that might
be in the collection. (for example, seventeenth century beads).
Al
Woods - Collections manager
Alfred Woods is the collections manager for the historical archaeology
collections at the Florida Museum of Natural History. The artifacts
excavated from St. Augustine are curated at the Museum as a joint
effort of the Museum, the City of St. Augustine and the Florida
Department of State. As collections manager, Al sees that the artifacts
are properly organized, labeled and stored. He monitors them for
signs of deterioration, and supervises student workers in the handling
and labeling of objects. Collections managers also organize and
maintain both paper and electronic databases of the objects' associated
records, and help researchers find their way around the collections.
The St. Augustine collections consist of more than 1.5 million items,
many of which are used by researchers nationwide for exhibits and
study.
James Levy - Conservator
James
Levy, a conservator with the Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research
Conservation Lab, has treated hundreds of objects from St. Augustine
over the years. Objects of metals, wood, leather, pottery, bone
and shell all require specialized chemical and mechanical treatments.
Museum
technicians
(Korinn and Shanna)
Objects to be curated must be cleaned, labeled, placed in marked
boxes of appropriate materials, and stored in labeled cabinets.
This information, along with the artifact's original field information
must then be entered into the curation database. The field records
and lab records associated with the objects must also be duplicated,
bound, and stored in a way that allows for easy retrieval. At the
Florida Museum of Natural History, these tasks are usually done
by curation technicians or rotating Museum student interns.
continue on to "In the
Lab "
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