Subject: Arsenic
John Gavin <johnnywyoming [at] hotmail__com> writes >The museum has been offered a rare Wyoming Mountain sheep mount. How >or where can I get a kit (or other tool) to check for arsenic. If >arsenic is present can it be removed? John Gavin inquired about the identification of arsenic on natural history mounts. Beside the Conserv-O-gram that was mentioned by another responder, an earlier and more complete article was published in the Leather Conservation News Volume 2, Number Two, Spring 1986.. It is entitled "Arsenic in Natural History Collections" by Catherine A. Hawks and Stephen L. Williams. It describes the modified Gutzeit test for arsenic. I have put together my own kit that I have used in the lab for many years to screen historic natural history specimens. One has to be careful to sample more than one area of a mount as the distribution of the pesticide dust varies. Taxidermists and museum curators tended to rub down the internal surfaces of the skin and just dust the exterior hairs. If you are interested in obtaining an off-print of the article, contact me directly. Hope this helps, Paul S. Storch Senior Objects Conservator/Section Head/Internal Unit Preparation Specialist Daniels Objects Conservation Laboratory (DOCL) B-109.1, Minnesota History Center 345 Kellogg Blvd. West St. Paul, MN 55102-1906 651-297-5774 Fax: 651-297-2967 *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:81 Distributed: Tuesday, June 4, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-81-004 ***Received on Sunday, 26 May, 2002