Subject: Fossils
Re the message on standards for fossil care/conservation: There is no international standard set for the care and conservation of fossils per se. There are some guidelines in the form of curricula developed for training in geological conservation. The best of these was developed for the post-graduate diploma course organized at Cambridge in 1993. Sections of this course are being offered through programs I have developed for International Academic Projects of London. Gerry Fitzgerald also wrote guidelines for the documentation of geological material, which was published in Collection Forum, the journal of the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections. Part of the problem is that fossils, and natural history specimens in general, do not automatically fall under the protection of the UNESCO Treaty. A great deal depends on the enabling legislation passed by each individual country. In the U.S., for example, natural history specimens are not included in the wording of the enabling legislation, though they are included in the wording of the treaty. Another part of the problem is that there are so very many fossil specimens, and so very many modes of preservation. The guidelines that I use for care of fossils in the geological conservation course sequence I teach are general, and you would not find much in them that differs for the general guidelines for care of any other materials. In a single paleontological collection, for example, you may find materials as diverse as unaltered organic material, bone, shell, amber, and a very wide range of rock, mineral and sediment materials. There are trace fossils, which are impressions left by a living organism, which includes tracks. There is the problem of conserving fossils in situ (cf. Dinosaur National Monument). The guidelines published by SPNHC are a good place to start in developing in-house standards that conform to generally accepted international guidelines. However, be aware that destructive testing is not only more acceptable in natural history collections than it is in humanities collections; it is de rigueur for several types of studies. Natural history conservation guidelines generally take this need into account, though they do demand that such testing be justified, and that specimens of primary importance be restricted from such use. Simply taking the guidelines for an archaeology collection and applying them to a paleontology collection won't work. Please contact me off-list for further information. Cheers, Sally Shelton Director, Collections Care and Conservation San Diego Natural History Museum P.O. Box 1390 San Diego, California 92112 619-232-3821 Fax: 619-232-0248 *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:20 Distributed: Tuesday, August 20, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-20-004 ***Received on Friday, 16 August, 1996