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Date: | Thu, 29 Jul 2004 22:04:35 +1200 |
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Hi Milan
>just few thoughts;
>Advantages:
>Spliting protects the collection from being entirely destroyed in, say,
>bombardment in war. I know of several collections that were lost here in
>Europe this way.
Those who are responsible (sat all levels) should have been tried &
convicted as war criminals.
>Certain groups of molluscs should be stored where best specialist are. Good
>coll. of Arctic Buccinids should be kept in Russia, Norway, Canada... not in
>Senegal or India.
Preferable. Many workers may have trouble getting funds to travel to
see collections. It IS possible to borrow large numbers of specimens,
butm is a pain at both ends.
>Disadvantages: personaly I dislike splitting of any collection (despite the
>above advantages) because I feel it is like someone would smashed
>Michelangelo's statue of David and one part of the statue would be exposed in
>Louvre Museum- Paris, another in Ufizzi Gallery- Florence...A good collection
>is a life-work and should remain in one piece.
Very true. A decent collection is a coherent entity, with its own
cataloging, history etc, and I do not like to hear of their being
broken-up.
Donating to institutions is not necessarily a safe move. Wasn't it
Princeton that popened its doors to the public to take its
collections away?
--
Andrew Grebneff
Dunedin
New Zealand
Fossil preparator
<[log in to unmask]>
Seashell, Macintosh, VW/Toyota van nut
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