Subject: Scanning policy
The National Library of Australia (NLA) is currently developing a scanning policy both for in-house scanning of collection material by library staff and for scanning of Library materials by users in the reading rooms. The NLA is a deposit library with material available for onsite use and through interlibrary loan via a document supply system. Special collections include pictorial, manuscript, map, rare book and asian collections. Has any other major Library or Archive developed a scanning policy? We are particularly interested in the preservation issues of scanning for access including: * procedures for scanning material by users and /or for users * what material is allowed to be scanned * different procedures for special collection materials * use of standardised in-house equipment versus users being allowed to bring in their own scanners * Types of scanners - overhead, flat bed, hand-held * Light sources, intensity, heat, duration of exposure during scanning. What is the difference to conventional photocopying? The Library would appreciate any information, advice, experience and policy/procedure documentation that you can provide, to the List or directly to Lydia Preiss Manager Collection Preservation National Library of Australia +61 2 6262 1627 Fax: +61 2 6257 1703 lpreiss [at] nla__gov__au *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:51 Distributed: Tuesday, December 15, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-51-032 ***Received on Tuesday, 15 December, 1998