Subject: Containers for contaminated study skins
Irene Karsten <ikarsten [at] ualberta__net> writes >... Due to >an upcoming move of the collection, we are just beginning to grapple >with issues related to the probable use of arsenic to prepare many >specimens in the collection. To date nothing has been tested but we >are looking into that at present and we are consulting with our >Environmental Health and Safety department. > >My question concerns the use of containers for the smaller study >skins as a means of protecting students from the risks due to the >presence of arsenic on the skins. I have been reading through >available literature on suggested handling techniques for such >specimens and for contaminated ethnographic artifacts. Techniques >recommended focus on protective wear such as gloves, respirators, >lab coats, etc. as well as methods for disposing and cleaning. Is it >possible to provide students with sufficient protection from arsenic >by enclosing the specimens in transparent plastic tubes of the kind >that are sometimes used in natural history collection storage? Are >there specific products available that might be recommended? Would >full protective gear still be required even with such enclosures? >Are such collections simply not appropriate for handling intensive >teaching? Certainly, it is well known that the vapor pressure at normal temperatures for arsenic is very low. Besides, there is a process of diffusion, though it is imperceptible and lasting a long time, when objects resp. here the studied skins are enriched with arsenic. PVC contains a lot of softeners, which might cause a problem concerning the longtime storage for contaminated skins. It can separate chlorines due to ageing and has a higher tendency for salts to creep up the walls of PVC containers in contrast to other materials (Astrup and Stub 1990). Therefore, I would recommend to use foiles of PE or plastics with a ceramic or aluminum coating rather than PVC. Foiles with a ceramic coating give easily access to control an artifact at any time. The priority of rank for foiles and aluminum coated foiles is given in a case study of the Kunstistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria (Griesser et al. 2005). I hope this information will help to find a good solution for the problem in moving a collection with contaminated artifacts. Helene Tello Dipl.-Rest. (FH) Ethnologisches Museum Berlin Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz Arnimallee 27 14195 Berlin +49 30 8301 296 Fax: +49 30 8301 500 *** Conservation DistList Instance 22:33 Distributed: Saturday, December 6, 2008 Message Id: cdl-22-33-005 ***Received on Wednesday, 26 November, 2008