travelling through time

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Travelling through time Preserving the past ~ for the future

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Travelling through time. Preserving the past ~ for the future Heather Brown Preservation Manager, State Library of South Australia. Preservation – why?. Linking the past with the future Knowledge. Preservation – why? cont. Part of cultural memory of the world. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Travelling through time

Travelling through time

Preserving the past

~ for the future

Heather Brown

Preservation Manager, State Library of South Australia

Page 2: Travelling through time

Preservation – why?

• Linking the past with the future

• Knowledge

Page 3: Travelling through time

whc.unesco.org/nwhc/pages/home.pages/homepage.htm

Preservation – why? cont.

Part of cultural memory of the world

Page 4: Travelling through time

Preservation – why?

• Focus on print heritage

Page 5: Travelling through time

Analogy of time traveller

Page 6: Travelling through time

The dangers

Agents of destruction

• Cultural heritage = a political

weapon

BBC News, 14 April 2005

• ‘Book arson “a Taleban-style” act’ The arsonists want the Mayek script to replace Bengali script in the state.

• …the loss of so many books was "an incalculable loss" to Manipur's heritage…

Page 7: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Agents of destruction

• Fires, floods, earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes…

Page 8: Travelling through time

Agents of destruction cont.

Item courtesy of Hutt City Council

Archives, NZ

Page 9: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Agents of destruction

• Insects and rodents, mould, environment …

Page 10: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Agents of destruction

• Inherent nature of original materials… e.g. poor quality paper

Page 11: Travelling through time
Page 12: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Inherent nature of original materials… e.g. digital information – difficulty in travelling over time

• Surrogate copies not always created to quality standards

- need to ‘do it once – do it right’

Page 13: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Poor storage –

including digital

Page 14: Travelling through time

The dangers

• Losing the balance between

access

and preservation

Page 15: Travelling through time

The ‘what’

• We cannot preserve everything• Ideally preservation is a pro-active

process• In the ‘best of worlds – linked to

collection development priorities• But few of us live in ideal conditions• The consequences of loss are

significant

Page 16: Travelling through time

The ‘how’

Two approaches – ability to profoundly affect time travelling

1)‘interconnectedness’ of all areas

of preservation

2) risk management

These are linked with the ‘how’ – the different techniques of preservation

Page 17: Travelling through time

‘Interconnectedness’

• Preservation as interconnected threads

• IFLA definition: ‘all the managerial and financial considerations,

including storage and accommodation provisions, staffing levels, policies, techniques and methods involved in preserving library and archival material and the information contained in them.’

(IFLA 2005)

Page 18: Travelling through time

Connecting the threads

Policies & Programs – linking strategically …

• treatments ‘traditional’ & modern

• environmental control

• IPM

• cleaning programs

• storage/housing

• disaster preparedness

• reformatting (copying)

• education of staff and users etc.

Page 19: Travelling through time

Connecting the threads cont.

Reformatting – an area ripe for further connections

e.g. programs for digitising, microfilming, conservation could be further integrated

• Key role of coordinating organisations e.g National Mission for Manuscripts (India)

Page 20: Travelling through time

Connecting the threads cont.

• Need for development of resource description or ‘preservation metadata’

• Recording not only existence of items but also conservation treatments & physical condition

• Also linked with records of surrogates e.g. microfilm, digital copies

• Needs further research and development.

Page 21: Travelling through time

Risk management

• Useful navigation tool for time travellers (Ashley-Smith 1999)

• ‘Agents of destruction’ are viewed as risk factors & assessed in terms of significance & consequences

• Focus on reformatting and particularly preservation microfilming…

Page 22: Travelling through time

Reformatting

• Copying information from one format to another

• Widely used strategy for time travelling of printed heritage

• Dates from earliest times with advantages of both preservation and access

Page 23: Travelling through time
Page 24: Travelling through time

Reformatting cont.

• Key reformatting strategies for print heritage are digitising and microfilming

• Saves ‘wear and tear’ on original

• May be only option, or most cost effective strategy

• Significant investment in reformatting cultural heritage in region

• Stakes are high ~ ‘do it once, do it right’

Page 25: Travelling through time

Risk management & microfilm

• preservation microfilm is produced to well-established, rigorous international quality standards

• long life expectancy – up to 500 years if stored to • recommended environmental conditions• in significant number of cases, preservation

microfilm will last long after originals have crumbled to dust.

Page 26: Travelling through time

Preservation microfilm cont.

• See article ‘Fading Fast’

Fran Molloy

‘Live Wire’

Sydney Morning Herald

11 August 2005

• Microfilm has limitations

Page 27: Travelling through time

Training in quality assurance• Critical to ensure that reformatted knowledge is preserved to highest level

• National Library of Australia’s PADI (Preserving Access to Digital Information) site - for digital preservation and access issues

  

Page 28: Travelling through time

Training in quality assurance

• IFLA-PAC, National Library of Australia and the State Library of South Australia: Training in Preservation Microfilming http://www.nla.gov.au/preserve/trainmat.html

• aim of developing practitioners’ skills in quality preservation microfilming

  

Page 30: Travelling through time

http://www.librarypreservation.org/index.php

Page 31: Travelling through time

Training in the region

• Singapore National Archives - regional training centre

• training workshops on microfilming and digitisation quality issues to practitioners & project managers

Page 32: Travelling through time

Regional collaboration in formal training

• Workshops can link with formal training

• Specialised training course - Certificate IV in Preservation Microfilming

• Training reduces the risks of poor quality copies

Page 33: Travelling through time

Standards, guidelines & QA auditing

• Ongoing revision of standards and guidelines - an integral part of risk management

• Standards are rigorous and well established for microfilm

• Guidelines and best practices for digital master files

Page 34: Travelling through time

Standards, guidelines & QA auditing cont.

Page 35: Travelling through time

Standards, guidelines & QA auditing cont.

• Linked with concept of ‘trusted digital repositories’

• An Audit checklist for the Certification of Trusted Digital Repositories (RLG 2005)

• draws on risk management framework to identify indicators of trustworthiness & reliability for digital repositories.

Page 36: Travelling through time

An Audit checklist for the Certification of Trusted Digital

Repositories cont.

• Includes systems for ongoing time travelling – plans for migration/emulation/refreshing, secure mass storage, management of contracts, licences etc.

• will require ongoing auditing to ensure certification

• systems are complex, will require frequent intervention

Page 37: Travelling through time

• the risks of long-term digital preservation still remain significant.

Page 38: Travelling through time

Conclusion

• We stand at a pivotal point in the journey for time travellers  

• The agents of destruction are many and varied.

Page 39: Travelling through time

Chances of survival can profoundly increase with ‘navigation chart’ that takes into account:

• interconnectedness of all areas of preservation

• risk management perspective – an integrated approach assessing, responding to & balancing risk factors

• advantages of a hybrid approach linking microfilming and digitising as reformatting strategies

• advantages of training and QA auditing

Page 40: Travelling through time

Stewardship

‘Doing the best we can with what we can achieve and being watchful and active.’

Colin Webb, NLA

Page 41: Travelling through time

Doing the best we can NOW

for the travellers of time into the future…