As collectors, we are curators, conservators, and stewards. As long as we keep
our provenience information, our collections are just as important, in their
effect, as museum collections. The difference is that museums are non-profit
repositories that can't make a move, meaning accession and deaccession, without
complete records kept. At least, this is the ideal.
"Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi, Rob,
OK, you can stuff the Natural History Museum
with all the meteorites you can find, but when London
falls to the barbarian hordes in 2714 AD, and one can
see the NHM in one great writhing pyre of flame with
the silhouettes of wild horsemen all about, howling with
joy and waving their spears topped with the severed
heads of curators... don't say I didn't warn you.
Sterling K. Webb
--------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message -----
From: "Rob McCafferty"
To: "Sterling K. Webb" ;
Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2007 7:55 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Commercialization, meteorite coins and other
ridiculous wastes of time
A great post Sterling. I kinda knew the Library of
Alexandria was coming as soon as you mentioned the two
possible methods of safeguarding.
Qhile the curation and storing of these artifacts in
institutions is vitally important, that they are
locked away invisible to all but a select few is a
travesty. I'm proud to show off my limited collection
to anyone who shows an interest.
Who is doing science the greater service?
OK it's the Natural History Museum, isn't it...Well
I'm doing my bit!
Rob McC
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