A Collaborative Approach to Hazardous & Contaminated Collections Conundrums

Holly Cusack-McVeigh, Mark Wilson, Sarah M. Halter
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Abstract

A wide range of inherent vices and acquired hazards can be found in museum collections worldwide. Inherent hazards include items decorated with lead paint, objects containing dyes and pigments, archaeological and geological collections containing silica dust, poisonous herbarium specimens, geological collections that naturally contain heavy metals or are radioactive, objects created from uranium glass and even historic medicinal collections containing old medications and other dangerous substances. Acquired hazards include historic chemical pesticide treatments including toxic metal-based poisons such as arsenic and mercuric salts and, later in time, organic compounds such as DDT were also employed. How can museums identify and manage these complex issues? This case study addresses these concerns and highlights a multi-year collaboration between the Indiana University Indianapolis Museum Studies Program, Purdue University’s School of Health Sciences and the Indiana Medical History Museum (IMHM) that can serve as a replicable model for other museums grappling with these same conundrums.
解决危险和污染藏品难题的合作方法
在世界各地的博物馆藏品中,可以发现各种各样的固有缺陷和后天危害。固有危害包括用含铅涂料装饰的物品、含有染料和颜料的物品、含有硅尘的考古和地质藏品、有毒的标本馆标本、天然含有重金属或放射性物质的地质藏品、用铀玻璃制作的物品,甚至是含有旧药和其他危险物质的历史医药藏品。后天危害包括历史上的化学杀虫剂处理,其中包括砷和汞盐等有毒金属毒药,后来还使用了滴滴涕等有机化合物。博物馆如何识别和管理这些复杂的问题?本案例研究探讨了这些问题,并重点介绍了印第安纳大学印第安纳波利斯博物馆研究项目、普渡大学健康科学学院和印第安纳医学历史博物馆(IMHM)之间的多年合作,该合作可作为其他博物馆应对这些相同难题的可复制模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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