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Subject: Online course on pest management

Online course on pest management

From: Helen Alten <helen<-at->
Date: Monday, September 27, 2010
MS210: Integrated Pest Management for Museums, Libraries and
    Archives
Instructor: Gretchen Anderson
Oct 4 through Nov 12, 2010

Location: Online at <URL:http://www.museumclasses.org>

The only thing worse than mice or cockroaches in your kitchen, is
finding them in your museum collection. Participants in Integrated
Pest Management for Museums, Libraries and Archives learn
low-toxicity methods of controlling infestations. IPM is the
standard method for treating incoming items and monitoring holdings.
Integrated Pest Management for Museums, Libraries and Archives
discusses how infestations occur, helps identify risks, provides
feasible mitigation strategies, discusses the different techniques
of treating infested materials, and helps you complete an IPM plan
and monitoring schedule for your institution. The course covers pest
identification, insects, rodent, birds, bats, other mammals and mold
infestations, as well as other problems raised by participants.

The Instructor:

    Objects conservator Gretchen Anderson learned her craft at the
    American Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian's
    Conservation Analytical Lab, the Canadian Conservation
    Institute, Getty Conservation Lab, the Los Angeles County Museum
    of Art, and the Minnesota Historical Society. She established
    the conservation department at the Science Museum of Minnesota
    in 1989. She is the co-author of _A Holistic Approach to Museum
    Pest Management_, a technical leaflet for the American
    Association for State and Local History and established a
    rigorous IPM program for the Science Museum. She was a key
    member in the planning team that designed and built a new
    facility for the Science Museum of Minnesota. This endeavor
    resulted in not only a state of the art exhibition and storage
    facility, but also a major publication about the experience of
    building a new museum and creating the correct environments:
    _Moving the Mountain_. In 2009 she accepted the position of
    conservator and head of the conservation section at the Carnegie
    Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. Ms. Anderson is a
    member of the American Institute for Conservation and the
    Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections. She
    lectures and presents workshops on preventive conservation, IPM,
    cleaning in museums, and practical methods and materials for
    storage of collections.

For more information on this course, and to sign up for it:
<URL:http://www.collectioncare.org/training/trol_classes_ms210.html>


                                  ***
                  Conservation DistList Instance 24:18
               Distributed: Thursday, September 30, 2010
                       Message Id: cdl-24-18-017
                                  ***
Received on Monday, 27 September, 2010

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