[Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum

Dirk Neumann dirk.neumann at zsm.mwn.de
Thu Dec 12 07:23:20 EST 2013


hmmmm ... yummy !

Another delicate "freezer" story: when we planned our new tissue & DNA 
storage and revised our deep freezing champers previously used for 
storage of dead carcasses awaiting mazaration, we found that the 
champers failed apparently several times earlier (with responsible 
colleagues either failed to notice or not telling before we started 
physical cleaning of the thawed champers). When stepping onto the 
aluminium plate flooring of the champers, thick dark blood was welling 
through all cracks and gaps necessitating, removal of the complete 
flooring to get rid of the blood (which - luckily - had not soaked into 
the insulation material). Because the door-heating system couldn't 
turned off, inside temperatures climbed above 30°C ....

Dirk




Am 12.12.2013 10:07, schrieb Julian Carter:
>
> I like this thread! And continuing the failed freezer full of animals 
> theme.......
>
> Back in late 1990s we were stripping down a beak whale head for a 
> skeletal prep. We got to the part of needing to mash up the brain 
> contents and wash them out but thought we'd leave that for another 
> day, so we slid the head back into our one remaining working cold 
> room. This was full of various dead animals including many, many 
> seabirds killed by the Sea Empress oil spill that had recently hit 
> West Wales.
>
> Two weeks later we came back. The freezer thermocouple read +30C.... 
> Oh dear! We opened the door and even for seasoned zoologists the smell 
> was rather strong. Ahead lay a sea of whale goo (yes, the brain had 
> glooped out), blood, intestinal juices and oil! The complaints from 
> the surrounding offices were now coming in thick and fast....
>
> Well we spent the next few days wading through this, taking accession 
> numbers and bagging the stuff for disposal. We then arranged for the 
> city council to collect the animal waste. They arrived in a standard 
> compression type bin lorry... We then had to convince the foreman of 
> the lorry that it was officially arranged and it ok to take the stuff! 
> So we loaded up the animal waste and then quickly stepped back as we 
> watched the foreman press the button that compressed the waste.... and 
> out came the tidal wave of rotting animal juices from the back of the 
> wagon! It then proceeded to drive down the main road dripping this 
> fine 'soup' across the carriageway...
>
> Jules
>
> Julian Carter
>
> Amgueddfa Cymru / NationalMuseum Wales
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *From:*nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu 
> [mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu] *On Behalf Of *Gali Beiner
> *Sent:* 11 December 2013 16:44
> *To:* Callomon,Paul
> *Cc:* nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu
> *Subject:* Re: [Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum
>
> What would you say if I told you we had not one failed freezer, but 
> three? Actually it's "have", not "has"... At the moment we're dealing 
> with the lovely fragrant contents.
>
> Evidently, we need to find out our very own local version for 'sod's law'!
>
> Gali
>
> ?????? 11 ???? 2013 16:08, "Callomon,Paul" <prc44 at drexel.edu 
> <mailto:prc44 at drexel.edu>> ???:
>
> We had a freezer fail the other day. Sod's Law (the UK version of 
> Murphy's Law) said it was the only one that did not have a fail alarm, 
> so things got good and warm and stayed that way for several days, if 
> not weeks. The first indication something was wrong was the presence 
> of Drosophila in the adjacent collection area. Laudably -- but 
> inadvisably -- one of our botanists investigated, found the delinquent 
> freezer...and opened the lid. In retrospect, he shouldn't have taken a 
> sudden intake of breath with that many fruit flies directly in front 
> of his face...
>
> *Paul Callomon*
> /Collection Manager, Malacology, Invertebrate Paleontology and General 
> Invertebrates/
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *Academy**of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Philadelphia*
> /callomon at ansp.org <mailto:callomon at ansp.org> Tel 215-405-5096 
> <tel:215-405-5096> - Fax 215-299-1170 <tel:215-299-1170>/
>
> *From:*nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu 
> <mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> 
> [mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu 
> <mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu>] *On Behalf Of *Kate 
> Pocklington
> *Sent:* Tuesday, December 10, 2013 10:17 PM
> *To:* dinoceras at juno.com <mailto:dinoceras at juno.com>; 
> nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu <mailto:nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu>
> *Subject:* Re: [Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum
>
> Story goes that back in the old days (late 1800's, early 1900's) some 
> chap found a cone snail on a beach in South Africa, it made it back to 
> the museum but sadly he didn't, he got harpooned and killed. (I heard 
> this whilst working at Oxford University Museum of Natural History.)
>
> Personally the most disgusting thing I've come across; a tank of fish, 
> the alcohol had evaporated down to about 5cm in the bottom of the tank 
> (~10%), the whole thing was infested with /Megaselia scalaris/ 
> including the maggots. The tank surfaces were covered with a layer of 
> eggs and maggots. Not to mention how disgusting the smell was... the 
> fish were rotting and the worst part; they were squirming with the 
> amount of maggots. Conservation to the max.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu 
> <mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> 
> [mailto:nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu] On Behalf Of 
> dinoceras at juno.com <mailto:dinoceras at juno.com>
> Sent: 10 December 2013 23:19
> To: nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu <mailto:nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu>
> Subject: [Nhcoll-l] The Dangerous Museum
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm working on a talk for visitors to our museum that's all about the 
> types of dangers (dangerous objects, substances, activities, etc.) we 
> sometimes encounter in our work behind-the-scenes in collections. It's 
> meant to be informative, not to mention---entertaining. I'm starting 
> with how we get objects to the museum, preparing & conserving them, 
> handling them, etc. If any of you have any stories or images you are 
> willing to share along these lines, please contact me. I'd love to 
> hear about what you've had to deal with from disease-carrying rodents 
> to nasty stuff on clothing & herbarium sheets, and everything in between.
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Chris Chandler
>
> Curator of Natural Science
>
> PutnamMuseum
>
> Davenport, IA
>
> dinoceras at juno.com <mailto:dinoceras at juno.com>
>
> 563-324-1054 x226 <tel:563-324-1054%20x226>
>
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>
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-- 
Dirk Neumann

Tel: 089 / 8107-111
Fax: 089 / 8107-300
email: Dirk.Neumann(a)zsm.mwn.de

Postanschrift:

Staatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns
Zoologische Staatssammlung München
Dirk Neumann, Sektion Ichthyologie / DNA-Labor
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81247 München

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---------

Dirk Neumann

Tel: +49-89-8107-111
Fax: +49-89-8107-300
email: Dirk.Neumann(a)zsm.mwn.de

postal address:

Bavarian Natural History Collections
The Bavarian State Collection of Zoology
Dirk Neumann, Section Ichthyology / DNA-Lab
Muenchhausenstr. 21
81247 Munich (Germany)

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