Powder Struggle: How a Contaminated Rare Book Collection Led to a New Paradigm of Collaboration at Harvard

J. Avedian, Brenda Bernier
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In 2015 staff in Harvard University’s Widener Library discovered an unidentified white powder in a few early twentieth-century books in Persian and Urdu languages that had been acquired four years previously from a rare book dealer in Pakistan. The powder was positively identified as the insecticides Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane(DDT), Coumaphos, and several derivatives. Later it became evident that these volumes were part of a large collection and that potentially thousands of volumes were contaminated. Various exposure assessments were followed by cleaning and reassessment which revealed that risks to persons were infinitely small. However, a bioassay revealed that the pesticide residues were still biologically active. The transparency of communication and demonstrated collaboration between Safety, Facilities, and Library personnel generated trust among staff that their health and safety were paramount. This trust was key to subsequent incidents of contaminated collections and our response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
《粉末之争:被污染的珍本藏书如何引领哈佛大学合作的新范式
2015年,哈佛大学怀德纳图书馆的工作人员在几本20世纪早期的波斯语和乌尔都语书籍中发现了一种身份不明的白色粉末,这些书籍是四年前从巴基斯坦的一位珍本书商那里获得的。粉末被确定为杀虫剂二氯二苯三氯乙烷(滴滴涕)、甘马福和几种衍生物。后来事实证明,这些书是一个庞大收藏的一部分,可能有数千卷被污染了。各种暴露评估之后进行了清理和重新评估,结果显示对人的风险是无限小的。然而,生物测定显示农药残留仍具有生物活性。安全、设施和图书馆人员之间透明的沟通和协作在员工之间产生了信任,他们的健康和安全是至高无上的。这种信任对随后的污染收集事件和我们对COVID-19大流行的应对至关重要。
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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