Subject: Freeze-drying herbarium specimens
W. Alexander Flinn <|alexflinn [at] hotmail__com> writes >We are about to treat some water damaged herbarium specimens. The >specimens are mounted in books and the assemblage has become wet. >Has anyone freeze-dried any similar objects? and if so what problems >were encountered? For instance, were the specimens friable after >treatment? were the pages easy to separate after treatment, etc.? Some years ago, speaking with Jack Magill, American Freeze Dry, Audubon, NJ) he told me that he regularly freeze dried flowers and such for florists, except for orchids, which could not be freeze dried (something about a membrane) so I would expect that the mounted specimens can be safely freeze dried. However, any color in the specimens may have already migrated to the pages of the books. Also, the freeze dried pages/specimens will be too dry after treatment and will require a day or two to come into equilibrium with the environment before handling. If the affected books were quickly frozen to buy time, there should be little or no difficulty in opening them. **** Moderator's comments: I don't know if this is current, but according to NEDCC's Emergency Management Section 3, Leaflet 6, <URL:http://www.nedcc.org/plam3/tleaf36.htm>, American Freeze-Dry, Inc. is at 39 Lindsey Avenue, Runnemede, NJ 08078, 856-546-0777 Jack Thompson Conservation Lab. 7549 N. Fenwick Portland, Oregon USA 503-735-3942 (phone/fax) *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:71 Distributed: Friday, April 19, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-71-003 ***Received on Thursday, 18 April, 2002