[Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum

Anderson, Gretchen AndersonG at CarnegieMNH.Org
Wed Dec 11 11:50:47 EST 2013


Along the same line – some years ago (early 2000’s) the we were called to pick up a dead goat from a local farm- for the comparative osteology collection.  Staff went to get it – it had been dead long enough to be bloated.  The biologist/preparator began working on her – and nicked the wrong bit of the gut – all the gas hissed out and even the biologist (who was known not to have much of a sense of smell) had to evacuate!  The entire corridor was ripe for days – in a brand new building!

Another story: gunpowder: At my former institution we had to call in the bomb squad a number of times.  When I was first involved as an intern, we found a batch of ammunition from the 1880’s- through WWI.  Bomb squad came in and disposed of the powder.  So…. Some years later, we called the squad again.  We had recently collected cultural material from the Hmong peoples of from the hills of Laos.  These people continued to use flint locks through the Vietnam War, reasoning that they could actually fix the guns themselves – unlike the more automated rifles.  So the guns came with powder horns.  Imagine my surprise when examining them, only to discover that there was still black powder – lots of powder- in the containers.  (I have never figured out how this was missed by the inspectors prior to shipment.) The only thing was that the bomb squad laughed at our concern – they swore that the powder could not be exploded – refused to believe that it was actually viable!  We made them dispose of it anyway.

Gretchen Anderson
Conservator
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
5800 Baum Blvd
Pittsburgh, PA 15202
Phone (412)665-2607
Andersong at CarnegieMNH.org<mailto:Andersong at CarnegieMNH.org>
http://www.carnegiemnh.org

From: nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu [mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu] On Behalf Of cjschmidt at fhsu.edu
Sent: Tuesday, December 10, 2013 10:35 AM
To: dinoceras at juno.com
Cc: nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu; nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu
Subject: Re: [Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum


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Here's a funny story,

Found a dead, bloated 100 lb Alligator Snapping Turtle in a lake in Florida. Strapped it to the top of my Jeep and drove all the way back to Kansas. Upon arrival (3 days later), I made one of my undergraduate student assistants clean the carcass and prepare it for being skeletonized. GROSS is an understatement!!

Curtis Schmidt
______________________________

Curtis J. Schmidt
Zoological Collections Manager
Sternberg Museum of Natural History
Fort Hays State University
3000 Sternberg Drive
Hays, KS  67601
(785) 628-5504 (collections)
(785) 650-2447 (cell)
______________________________

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