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Introduction
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Examining artifacts under
a microscope. Photo courtesy of Alexandria Archaeology, City
of Alexandria, Virginia.
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Access
to and use of collections is an essential aspect of doing both archeology
and collections management, as well
as conducting interpretation and heritage-oriented activities. Repository
staff must have easy access to collections to implement basic management
activities discussed in previous sections, as well as to use them for
research, interpretation, and developing exhibits and public programs.
Archeologists and other scholars, interpreters, educators, culturally
affiliated groups, and members of the public need access to collections
for:
- research,
such as background study to develop a project proposal, regional or
thematic synthetic works, conservation studies, and materials analysis
- publications,
such as books, articles, films, video, multimedia, and Internet products
- exhibitions,
such as exhibits of objects and documents, visible storage, and multimedia
exhibits on the Internet or CD-ROM
- education
and interpretation, such as demonstrations in the field for the
local community where a project was undertaken, classroom and repository
educational programs (especially in academic repositories for instruction
and class projects), and long distance learning on the Internet
- heritage-related
activities, such as sacred and religious rites
- reproductions,
such as reproductions for sale, as well as preservation and security
copies provided as alternatives to the original for use
- derivative
works, such as posters, T-shirts, tote bags, postcards, toys,
and coloring books
Although 36 CFR
79 mandates access to federal collections for their use and many state,
tribal, and local curation policies have similar mandates, there are
few policies or standardized procedures on how much and what kinds of
access are appropriate for archeological collections. There are different
issues that pertain to access and use of different kinds of collections,
types of material remains, and types of associated records, as well
as to different types of repositories. These issues mainly involve striking
a balance between preservation and use.
The benefits of
increased access and use include reaching a wider audience, advancing
science, promoting research and interpretation, and sharing public resources.
The disadvantages include the need for increased security, careful consideration
of the conservation risks to
the objects and records, and possible infringements on intellectual
property rights if copyright
and privacy considerations are not properly handled. As well, there
is often a need for more funding and staffing to handle access and use
activities.
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Home
Contents
1.
Introduction
2.
Introduction to Curation
3.
Relevant Laws, Regulations, Policies, and Ethics
4.
Today's Key Issues
5.
Curation Prior to the Field
6.
Curation in the Field and Lab
7. Repositories
8.
Collections Management
9.
Access and Use
Introduction
Policies & procedures
Loans
Public access
Researcher access
Destructive analysis
Intellectual property rights
Quiz
Bibliography
Links
Print
this section 
10.
The Future
Glossary
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