Investigation of Residual Contamination Inside Storage Cabinets: Collection Care Benefits from an Industrial Hygiene Study

2017 
Closed storage cabinets become the repository for hazardous vapors emitted by collections, deteriorating cabinet construction materials, and/or collection storage materials, especially wood products and many plastics. Cabinet replacement has been a major goal in the collection care program at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. The museum has targeted over 5000 old storage cabinets with interior wood framing and wooden drawers for disposal or surplus as funding permits. These cabinets had housed, or continued to house, anthropology and vertebrate zoology collections as well as papers, books, and photographic materials. The cabinets and their past or present contents were known to have been subjected to various pesticide treatments, many of which were presumed to have adsorbed onto or absorbed into cabinet interior materials. In order to understand the risk and to best sequence a staged replacement of old cabinets, the museum administration sought the expertise of occupational health and ...
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