| Alaska Regional Office | U.S. Department of the Interior | |||||
| Cultural Resources Team | National Park Service |
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Museum Curation |
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What We Do |
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The Alaska Regional Office curatorial staff help care for the thousands of natural and cultural objects that are associated with Alaska’s parks; these precious “pieces of the parks” are preserved and maintained in perpetuity on behalf of the American people. These items have important uses; many are made available to the public in National Park museum exhibits but the great majority serve scientists and other researchers who wish to understand the stories told by the parks’ natural and cultural resources. Curators inventory, register, and catalog museum collections. They also study and document the items in their care and provide appropriate conservation treatment when necessary. Much of their work centers on maintaining a stable and protected storage environment for the objects so that these items can survive the centuries and be available for both study and enjoyment by future generations. The staff, under the leadership
of the Senior Curator, provides professional guidance and technical assistance
to the Alaska parks in the management of museum collections. The Alaska
Region Curatorial Center (ARCC), the largest National Park Service museum
repository in Alaska is located in the Alaska Regional Office and houses
specimens from nearly all the Alaska National parks. Currently, the ARCC
cares for over 1 million museum archives and objects, including 450,000
natural and cultural items such as artifacts, fossils, and plant specimens.
Because the ARCC contains fire safes and other specialized museum storage
features, the center houses fragile video, film, and photographic records
on behalf of the parks in the Alaska Region. In addition, the center provides
secure and carefully designed curatorial work and lab space for the proper
study and treatment of museum items.
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