33 posts categorized "NMNH Library"

January 04, 2012

Two Weeks Well Spent: Intern Mele Avery

Signage in NMNHFor the past two weeks, it has been my privilege to work with the collections of the National Museum of Natural History Library here in Washington, DC.  As part of my library studies program at the University of British Columbia, I came here to do a short practicum and learn as much as I could about natural history libraries. I am fascinated by the natural world and ornithology, so I was very excited to come and see first hand the “ins and outs” of a world-class life sciences library and museum.  

During my time here I worked on two projects, one in the Fishes library and the other in Reptiles.

The Fishes collection holds more than 8,000 items, and is slated for relocation in January 2012. The NMNH Library was eager to safeguard the collection following the recent experience they had when their main collection was moved to a new location. The contractors hired to move the items were not gentle, and some items were damaged as a result. My responsibility was to go through the Fishes collection and identify items that were fragile or in poor condition. I also removed a few duplicate items and set others aside for Special Collections.

The Reptiles collection will also be moved in January. The new location will follow the Library of Congress call number system for shelving serials, rather than journal title. Reorganizing the serials was simple but not easy. The reorganization process was complicated by the fact that not all the titles appeared on the list of items to be moved. This led to a few surprises, when we came across titles that weren’t on the list. A few times, we were forced to back-track and re-shift volumes in order to correct these omissions. Other items were mislabeled, not cataloged, or did not have bar codes, and were set aside for the Technical Services department to correct.

While working with the Fishes library, these were the questions I needed to answer about each item I pulled as a candidate for preservation:

  1. Is the item in reasonably good condition for transit? If no, then:
  2. What method should be used to safeguard it from damage?

 

Satirical publication "Discus" in NMNH

 

Items like older, unbound periodicals were usually placed in archival envelopes. Newer journals in good condition could be tied with twill tape or placed in Princeton files. Books in poor condition (missing covers, lose spines, pages falling out) were both tied and placed in envelopes. Items in fair condition were either given envelopes or tied, depending on the general characteristics of the item (e.g.: age, dimensions, paper quality, condition of the spine/binding). I learned a new tying technique from Polly Lasker (my supervisor) that reduces bulk and the likelihood of becoming untied once back on the shelf.

 

Tied books and journals in NMNH


The work in the Fishes library took up the first week, and was a great lesson in the thoroughness needed for preservation work. Once the move is completed, I hope to hear from the library and find out how it went!

In the course of prepping the Fishes library, I found some very interesting items:

  • Two satirical journals (Dopeia & Ichtherps) were discovered and set aside to be written up and featured by a reference librarian on the NMNH website.
  • An issue of a tropical fish magazine from the 1940s that discussed the difficulty of acquiring new fish due to the wartime rationing and cuts of supply lines in Asia. I would not have expected to find commentary on WWII hardships in the Fishes library of the Smithsonian, so it came as a pleasant surprise.
  • A crumbling book from 1846 that turned out to be from the personal collection of Spencer Fullerton Baird, a long-serving Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. This was given to Special Collections.

 

Satirical publication "Dopeia" in NMNH



I’d like to sincerely thank all the librarians and staff who worked with me during my practicum. This has been a great learning experience for me, and I appreciate the time taken out of your busy schedules to try and show me the ropes. Thank you all so much!


— Mele Avery

September 15, 2011

Spotlight on Amateur Naturalists

A web project by Courtney Shaw, VZ Librarian, formatted for the web by Diane Pitassy.

This website, Spotlight on Amateur Naturalists, highlights the scientific and popular literature contributions of prominent amateur naturalists from the 18th-20th centuries. The project started about four years ago when the then Zoo librarian, Alvin Hutchinson, thought that it might be nice to highlight some of the non-taxonomic books in the VZ libraries, especially those used by scientists use in the course of their work.

Konrad Gesner, Historia animalium [History of animals], 1551-87, "De Camelo."

As Courtney Shaw started investigating this idea, she asked many curators what books and people they thought should be included. It became evident that many contributions referenced by the curators were written by amateur naturalists. The decision was made to pursue the idea of how amateur naturalists have enhanced the knowledge base of vertebrate zoology literature.

The goal of the site is to give a fullness to the idea that many people, of all ages and walks of life, can actively contribute to science and inspire interest and concern for the natural world.

The site is divided into different publication categories. Many images of books were taken by the Libraries' Photo Lab and added to the Galaxy of Images; some were used in the current text. Whenever possible, works in the public domain were linked to full text online versions available on the Biodiversity Heritage Library, Archive.org, and Google Books. Hotlinks were also made to EOL pages when specific taxa were referenced in the text. The site will be included on the Vertebrate Zoology Libraries page as a featured presentation.

Courtney Shaw

 

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August 05, 2011

New Arrivals in the Natural History Library/Museum Studies Reference Library

Here are some of our most recent items to be added to the Natural History Library/Museum Studies Reference Library.

Hallofwonders

The great American hall of wonders: art, science, and invention in the nineteenth century, by Claire Perry. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian American Art Museum; London  In association with D Giles Ltd., 2011

"Published in conjunction with the exhibition Great American Hall of Wonders, on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., from July 15, 2011 through January 8, 2012."

E169.1 .P443 2011 Museum Studies Reference Library Smithsoniana

Expeditions
Scientific exploration and expeditions: from the age of discovery to the twenty-first century, by Neil A. Hamilton. Armonk, N.Y. : Sharpe Reference, c2010

Q115 .H167 2010 Natural History Reference

OriginCharles Darwin: after the Origin, by Sheila Ann Dean. Ithaca, N.Y.: Paleontological Research Institution and Cornell University Library, 2009.  Paleontological Research Institution special publication; no. 34

QH31.D2 D465 2009 Natural History

 

Seeing
Seeing further: the story of science, discovery, and the genius of the Royal Society, edited & introduced by Bill Bryson. New York, NY: William Morrow, c2010

Q41 .S44 2010 Museum Studies Reference Library

 

Polly Lasker

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June 29, 2011

New and Notable—National Museum of Natural History Library

Late June new book arrivals in the Natural History Libraries — quite a cross section!

Where to watch birds in Ethiopia, by Claire Spottiswoode, QL692.E8 S66 2010 Birds Library

Bird

The great sperm whale: a natural history of the ocean's most magnificent and mysterious creature, by Richard Ellis, QL737.C435 E437 2011 Kellogg Library

Whale

First life: discovering the connections between stars, cells, and how life began, by David Deamer, QH326 .D43 2011 Natural History Library

First

Dinosaurs and other extinct saurians: a historical perspective, edited by R.T.J. Moody, et al., QE861.4 .D57 2010 Vertebrate Paleontology Library

Dino

Richard Woods (1715-1793): master of the pleasure garden, by Fiona Cowell, SB470.W66 C69 2009 Botany Library

Woods

Chrysanthemum stones: the story of stone flowers, by Thomas S. Elias and Hiromi Nakaoji, QE471.15.C3 E45 2010 Botany Library

Stones

Polly Lasker

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