A Real "Nation's Attic"
It's a place with a two-foot-wide "dead zone," a "wet" pod and a refrigerated room for the garbage
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, November 1997, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Walking down the Street, I noted the skylights nearly 40 feet up, the great rivers of ducts and cables, the occasional Indian canoe or plesiosaur skeleton on the walls.
"We were the first Smithsonian building to be fully wired for Internet communication," Wilcox announced proudly. "And with all the utility lines and even the high-pressure steam line for the molecular systematics lab out in the open here, there's easy access for maintenance."
We stopped at a special "clean room" designed for meteorite storage. Through the window I could see an examination box with rubber sleeves that you insert your arms into. The atmosphere in the box is dry nitrogen, which is relatively inert. A humid, oxygen atmosphere corrodes meteorites. The only other such chamber he knows of is at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
On to an anthropology processing lab: trays and trays of Indian beads, necklaces, bits of feather, animal bones and teeth, all arrayed in acid free boxes that will be placed in cabinets and then into the pods. There are boxes within boxes.
"We're still moving into this place," Wilcox remarked. Meaning that everything brought here from Natural History, American History or wherever is inventoried, cleaned and remounted in the safest, most efficient way known to science.
"Every item in the anthropology collection has a bar code on it with the catalog number matching the code on the box and fed into a computer," he pointed out. "A researcher can locate a specific object in seconds."
The significance, not to say the enormity, of this coding system came to me only gradually. Not so much when he showed me the hundreds and hundreds of kachina dolls being packed immovably in individual boxes (so they can be examined without being touched); not so much when I saw the Casas Grandes Mexican pots, old, delicate and implausibly valuable, and which in another era would have perched atop file cabinets along with Pacific Island mats, Maori shields and the curator's dusty hat.
No, it was when I was exposed to the spear and harpoon collection that I understood the importance of those bar codes.
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Comments (2)
I would like to know the career, study or internship opportunities available or offered at the SMSC. Do we have a website for the institute?
Posted by Wrikdev Sarkar on October 25,2009 | 12:55 PM
MY GRANDDAUGHTER WOULD LIKE TO KNOW JUST HOW BIG IS THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE IN SIZE ? ACRES ? MILES ? HOW MANY FLOORS ? IS IT JUST ONE BUILDING ? OR NUMEROUS BUILDINGS ? HOW LONG WOULD IT TAKE TO SEE ALL THEIR IS TO SEE ?
Posted by BEVERLY SWISHER on October 18,2009 | 03:53 PM