Subject: Survey on conservation of porous calcareous stone
**** Moderator's comments: Please respond directly to the author. I am a conservator working as a consultant to a project on the preservation of porous calcareous stone at the Getty Conservation Institute. I am collecting information pertaining primarily to the conservation of limestone, but also related to marble and other calcareous stone. We are particularly interested in salt-related or clay-related deterioration problems and solutions. The information collected will be synthesized and used in a report to the Scientific Department at the Getty Conservation Institute to help guide current and future scientific research. The report will help focus the course of investigation by establishing the resources, methods etc. that are currently being used by conservators, conservation scientists and others to characterize limestone, and determine mechanisms of deterioration and rates of decay. Of particular interest is the identification of the common rules of thumb or indicators used to determine an appropriate course of treatment. This report supplements a comprehensive review of the published literature on these subjects now underway; it is our intention that the final version will be made available as an annotated bibliography and review of current practice. Contributors will be acknowledged in the report, but your name will not be associated with any specific information you provide. This review will also be posted on the GCI's web site. Attached are some questions that may provide an indication of the range of information in which we are interested. I welcome your response to any or all of the questions. Thank you for taking the time to respond to this query. Please contact me to discuss any questions you might have. What are the primary published sources of reference information that you use to guide your investigations? Do you use field tests to evaluate the soundness of stone, or to identify deterioration patterns or causes, or are samples returned to your studio or laboratory for evaluation? What field or laboratory tests do you use? How often do you work with a conservation scientist, materials scientist, or engineer on a given stone conservation project? Briefly list, in general, your methods for diagnosing problems and prescribing solutions. Briefly describe the types of consolidation treatments you have performed. Have you identified clays as a primary or secondary reason for observed deterioration modes on artifacts or architectural monuments? In the instance of suspected salt crystallization damage, have you analyzed the salts, and used that information to design a course of treatment? Please describe. Have you used data from mercury intrusion porosimetry tests or similar methods to determine the suitability of a particular treatment on a particular stone? What mineralogical information do you find most useful in characterizing modes of deterioration? How often do you rely on consultations with colleagues, either within or outside of your organization? How often do you rely on published literature? Case studies vs. lab studies? Do you find the morphology of salt efflorescence a useful indicator for the condition of the stone? Do you have any treatment reports, condition reports, lab reports, etc. that you would be willing to share pertaining to the conservation of deteriorated porous calcareous stone? Of particular value would be descriptions of both successful and unsuccessful treatments and evaluations of treatments performed in past years. The identification of unsuitable treatments is particularly important in preventing the future loss or damage to historic patrimony. How do you determine, in the short term and the long term, the success of a consolidation treatment? Have you performed desalination treatments and, if so, do you generally use surface washing, immersion, or poulticing procedures? Please describe. Do you monitor the desalination process and, if so, how? Have you used a preconsolidant before desalination of deteriorated stone? Do you rely on a commercial lab or supplier to analyze samples and recommend a product for treatment? Comments? John Griswold Conservator Griswold Conservation Associates, LLC. 2054 Coldwater Canyon Drive Beverly Hills, CA 90210 310-271-5255 Fax: 310-271-5277 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:40 Distributed: Monday, November 2, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-40-018 ***Received on Wednesday, 28 October, 1998