Subject: Alkaline board and protein
I am very interested in Dennis's comments and questions, having had many of the same thoughts myself, also over an extended number of years. We should consider a number of factors in choosing storage materials, not just presumed and theoretical problems: 1. Most proteins can easily tolerate mild levels of alkalinity. 2. The surface alkalinity of buffered boards is not high unless the humidity is very high, in which case there are other, more serious and urgent problems. 3. Some of the breakdown products of proteins are or can become highly acidic. These can accelerate further changes. Do buffered materials neutralize these products of deterioration under normal conditions? 4. Does the buffering in storage materials serve, in fact, mostly to protect the storage materials against premature deterioration that would necessitate a high rate of expensive replacement? I have not noticed any difference in deterioration of proteins that were stored in buffered materials from those stored in non-buffered materials. My observations cover 25 years in ethnographic and archaeological collections and include surveys of about 30 different museums. Most detectable deterioration is due to more overt causes. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:51 Distributed: Tuesday, January 18, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-51-001 ***Received on Friday, 14 January, 1994