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Wet Specimen Collections and Alcohol Management

Wet Specimen Collections and Alcohol Management. A presentation by Giselle Stanton Collection Information - Standards and Support Collection Information Services The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.

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Wet Specimen Collections and Alcohol Management

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  1. Wet Specimen Collections and Alcohol Management • A presentation by • Giselle Stanton • Collection Information - Standards and Support • Collection Information Services • The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

  2. The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa James Hector was appointed Director of the Colonial Survey in 1865 'One of the most important duties in connection with the geological survey of a new country is the formation of a scientific museum.'

  3. Fish Molluscs Birds Crustaceans Marine invertebrates Insects Natural Environment 1.2 million specimen lots • Land mammals • Plants / Botany • Marine mammals • Reptiles and Amphibians • Fossil vertebrates

  4. Overview for today • Natural history wet specimen collections • Redevelopment Project • Alcohol Management • Developing a process for wet specimens

  5. 1. Natural history wet specimen collections • 90,000 litres of alcohol (ethanol & isopropanol) • 54,000 jars (100ml – 2L) • 1500 polypails (20L) • 154 mobile tanks (250L – 500L) • 8 large immobile tanks (max. 2000L) • 10 stepping / formalin tanks

  6. 2. Redevelopment Project • Scientific Research • Preservation and Conservation • Access • Regulations

  7. Why redevelop • alcohol management?

  8. Seals broken, the effects of evaporation, rust and mould is seen.

  9. Damage from mould

  10. Rusting of storage systems

  11. 3. Alcohol Management • What is Alcohol Management? • Preservation • Conservation • Health and safety compliance • Regulations

  12. New Government Regulations • The Hazardous Substances and New Organisms (HSNO) Act 2006: • 1. Property Controls • 2. Lifecycle Controls

  13. KE EMu Specimen tab – Catalogue Module

  14. Why move the alcohol Management tab?

  15. Problem with Alcohol Management tab being in the catalogue is duplication

  16. Benefits of Alcohol Management tab in the Locations module • 1 container of alcohol=1 holder location

  17. Stage one:Sources of data identified Alcohol

  18. What is a Holder? • 3 holder types: • Jars • Polypails • Tanks

  19. 4.Developing a process for wet specimens in KE EMu 6 step process: • New Holder Location records • New Alcohol Management tab • Sources of legacy data identified • Data grooming • Data standards set • Data transfer

  20. 1.New Holder Locations Why Holder locations? • Ability to move and track current locations to fixed locations • Size and volumes of containers recorded • Brand and type of container recorded • Safety and handling requirements recorded

  21. Holder Locations

  22. Holder Locations

  23. 2. New Alcohol Management Tab

  24. 3. Sources of alcohol data identified Paper registers Catalogue cards Notes, other free text fields Large MS Excel worksheets Alcohol Management tab

  25. 4. Data Grooming • Sources of data cleaned • Staff input and internal institutional knowledge • Removal of abbreviations and acronyms • Gaps filled • Global Replaces • Location codes linked to specimens

  26. 5. Data standards set • Controlled vocabulary • Agreed terminology • Agreed process

  27. 6. Data Transfer • Clean data transfer • Export sheets made using a MS Excel CSV file • Verified and Imported into the new alcohol management tab

  28. Progress Status today… Data transfer still in progress for collections other than Fish Valuable statistics gained Clean and verified data Wet specimen process reviewed and standards set Meets new regulations and compliance requirements

  29. Alcohol Management into the future • Benchmarks: • Access to specimens • Identify the wet collections • Reliable statistics and information • Taxonomic ordering - no longer essential • Wet specimen conservation

  30. Conclusions • 1.The Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa • 2.Natural history wet specimen collections • 3.Redevelopment Project • 4.Alcohol Management • 5.Developing a process for wet specimens in KE

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