Subject: Fire and alcohol
This message is being cross-posted to both museum conservation and safety lists and may be forwarded. We are facing a problem that has come up at other natural history museums when the issue of fire safety and labeling arises: namely, what are we, really? The issue arises in dealing with what are commonly called "wet" or "fluid" collections, those collections of animals or tissues preserved in alcohol or other volatile solvents. The fire marshal here will continue to cite us until we have placed a universal warning label on every jar containing specimens in our collections. In many cases, this label is larger than the jar label, and sometimes larger than the jar. In our collections, there are literally millions of specimens in ethanol. The number of labels which would have to be generated is in the hundreds of thousands. We label and contain containers of undispensed chemicals, but the preservative in the specimen jars is diluted to 70% ethanol before it is used. As John Simmons of the University of Kansas and others have shown, the concentration level often continues to drop when specimens are stored in the alcohol. A 70% level appears to be optimum for the prevention of biodeterioration of specimens. We are attempting to identify and isolate those specimen jars containing any of the more dangerous solvents, but those are a tiny minority. There is not yet any sort of fireproofing of the storage rooms themselves, and no explosion-proofing. Building upgrades are in the works. My question is this: since there do not seem to be fire codes written for this type of situation (we seem to be closest to codes for liquor warehouses), how much of this is subjective interpretation and how much is common sense when it comes to labeling every jar? Has anyone else faced these requirements? I am certainly willing to comply with everything we need to do, but this one puzzles me. It will increase handling (and consequent wear) of the specimens if the hazard label obscures the information label. We have suggested labeling the door to the storage area, but that is considered additional, not alternative. Comments and advice are much appreciated. Sally Shelton Collections Conservation Specialist San Diego Natural History Museum *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:62 Distributed: Thursday, February 24, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-62-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 22 February, 1994