Academic literature on the topic 'Canadian Conservation Institute'

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Journal articles on the topic "Canadian Conservation Institute"

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Inch, Jeanne E. "Canadian Conservation Institute." Collections 9, no. 3 (September 2013): 283–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/155019061300900304.

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Peever, Mary P. "Conservation of a Chineseguat the Canadian Conservation Institute." Studies in Conservation 33, no. 1 (January 1988): 158–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/sic.1988.33.1.158.

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Peever, Mary P. "CONSERVATION OF A CHINESEGUAT THE CANADIAN CONSERVATION INSTITUTE." Studies in Conservation 33, sup1 (January 1988): 158–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/sic.1988.33.s1.037.

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Tse, S., P. Bégin, and E. Kaminska. "HIGHLIGHTS OF PAPER RESEARCH AT THE CANADIAN CONSERVATION INSTITUTE." Studies in Conservation 47, sup3 (September 2002): 193–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/sic.2002.47.s3.040.

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Shaftel, A., and J. Ward. "CONSERVATION OF THE SINCLAIR INN MUSEUM, AND THE PAINTED ROOM ANNAPOLIS ROYAL, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA." ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences XLII-2/W5 (August 21, 2017): 641–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-xlii-2-w5-641-2017.

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Conservation of the historic 18<sup>th</sup>C. Sinclair Inn Museum, and of the recently discovered late 18th/early 19thC. unique panoramic wall paintings located in an upstairs room, are co-dependent. This project was carried out with Canadian Conservation Institute (CCI) staff, and Conservator in Private Practice Ann Shaftel. This paper will introduce the Sinclair Inn Museum, outline the CCI murals and building investigations of 2011-15, the mural investigation of 2015-16, which confirmed that the mural extended to all four walls of the function room, now referred to as the Painted Room, and to describe how it has been revealed and conserved to date.
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Benden, Danielle M., and Mara C. Taft. "A Long View of Archaeological Collections Care, Preservation, and Management." Advances in Archaeological Practice 7, no. 3 (August 2019): 217–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aap.2019.22.

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AbstractCollections care practices have become professionalized in the last 30 years, in large part because of the work of organizations such as the American Alliance of Museums, the Canadian Conservation Institute, the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections, the American Institute for Conservation, and others in the museum sphere. Advances in preservation and management have benefited the discipline of archaeology in the field and laboratory. This thematic issue provides an updated perspective on the current happenings in the repository, highlighting innovative techniques and practices that collections specialists employ when managing the archaeological record. This article considers a macroview of the issues surrounding archaeological curation today and ponders what the future of collections preservation can and should look like.
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Down, Jane L., Maureen A. MacDonald, Jean Tétreault, R. Scott Williams, and Jean Tetreault. "Adhesive Testing at the Canadian Conservation Institute: An Evaluation of Selected Poly(Vinyl Acetate) and Acrylic Adhesives." Studies in Conservation 41, no. 1 (1996): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1506550.

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Down, Jane L., Maureen A. MacDonald, Jean Tétreault, and R. Scott Williams. "Adhesive testing at the Canadian Conservation Institute-an evaluation of selected poly(vinyl acetate) and acrylic adhesives." Studies in Conservation 41, no. 1 (January 1996): 19–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/sic.1996.41.1.19.

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Antomarchi, C., A. Brokerhof, S. Michalski, I. Verger, and R. R. Waller. "Teaching Risk Management of Collections Internationally." Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals 2, no. 2 (June 2005): 117–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/155019060500200205.

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Risk assessment and the purpose it serves, risk management, are widely adopted by business, institutions, and governments, seeking to minimize future losses of all kinds. If the preservation goal of museums is stated as the delivery of the collection to some future point in time with as little loss in value as possible, then risk assessment and risk management provide the only rational means to reach this goal. Difficulties arise due to uncertainty and complexity. A three-week course on this method has been designed, and recently offered, by ICCROM (the International Center for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property) and the Canadian Conservation Institute (CCI), with the collaboration of leading experts from the Canadian Museum of Nature (CMN) and the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage (ICN). Demand for the knowledge was strong, as shown by the number and diversity of applicants worldwide. Great care and effort was taken with the design of the learning process and the supporting resources, in order to overcome the known, and profound, challenges of the subject. The result has been successful.
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Strang, Tom. "Developing a GIS of Hazards for Canadian Cultural Institutions." Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 2 (June 15, 2018): e26305. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/biss.2.26305.

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The Canadian Conservation Institute (CCI) has developed a Geographic Information System (GIS) of hazards for Canadian cultural heritage institutions. The greatly increased access to open data is changing how advisory bodies like the CCI and the public can access and share information. For the purpose of investigating how a GIS approach can assist the CCI with its mandate to improve the preservation of collections, a map layer of cultural heritage institutions across Canada has been assembled and continues to be upgraded for accuracy, inclusion and detail (Fig. 1). This was combined with a collation of hazard layers; a partial list includes: seismic risk, notably expectations of earthquake severity tied to improvements in the national building code, tsunami exposure, wildfire data, hurricane, tornado, lightning density, pest distribution, and energy use indicators such as heating degree days and climate norm data. The platform allows examination of expectations around climate change driven risks such as sea-level rise, storm-incursions, permafrost melt. The GIS approach will also allow reassessments around expected changes to flood risk maps issued by jurisdictions, as well as Statistics Canada layers on population related factors such as changes in numbers of local populations, income and demographic shifts which can be stressors or opportunities. Sources have been drawn from federal, provincial, municipal, and academic evaluations of hazards, which now are more commonly published as GIS products. Mapping Canadian heritage institution's within a GIS improves our ability to: visualise and interpret to clients the relative magnitude of their local hazards, make ties to more refined local analyses, and show adjacencies to mapped historical events. From a national perspective the GIS can generate profiles of aggregated institutional exposure to the hazards, and more readily identify sub-populations of institutions for which particular risks would rank higher or lower among their concerns. This improves CCI's preventive conservation advisory service's perspective on mappable risks for any institution we deal with as clients. Ultimately, through federal initiatives in open data, it is our intention that client groups can look at the GIS for the purpose of educating themselves on hazards they would want to prepare for.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Canadian Conservation Institute"

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Pilgrim, Brooks B. "A review of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and Parks Canada's marine protected areas program and their role in Canadian fisheries management /." 2005.

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Vokey, Joanne. "The evolution of conservation harvesting in Atlantic Canada /." 2001.

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Books on the topic "Canadian Conservation Institute"

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Institute, Canadian Conservation. New directions for the Canadian Conservation Institute. [Ottawa]: Canadian Conservation Institute, 1997.

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Institute, Canadian Conservation. CCI services =: Services offerts par l'ICC. Ottawa, Ont: Canadian Conservation Institute = Institut canadien de conservation, 1989.

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Canadian Conservation Institute. Conservation Research Services and Canada Communications Canada, eds. Adhesive testing at the Canadian Conservation Institute: An evaluation of selected poly(vinyl acetate) and acrylic adhesives. Ottawa, Canada: Communications Canada, 1992.

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Reinsch, Anthony Ernest. Industrial cogeneration in Canada: Prospects and perspectives. Calgary, Alta: Canadian Energy Research Institute, 1987.

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Institute Conference on Natural Resources Law (5th 1991 Ottawa, Ont.). Growing demands on a shrinking heritage: Managing resource-use conflicts : essays from the Fifth Institute Conference on Natural Resources Law. Calgary: Canadian Institute of Resources Law, 1992.

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Institute, Canadian Conservation, and Institut canadien de conservation, eds. Staff list : Canadian Conservation Institute =: Liste du personnel : Institut canadien de conservation. Ottawa, Ont: Canadian Conservation Institute = Institut canadien de conservation, 1987.

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Canadian Industry Program for Energy Conservation., Canada. Office of Energy Efficiency., Energistics Group Inc, and Canadian Lime Institute, eds. Energy efficiency opportunity guide in the lime industry: Canadian Lime Institute. [Ottawa]: Natural Resources Canada, Office of Energy Efficiency, 2001.

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Technical Bulletin 3 : December 1980 Canadian Conservation Institute : Recommended Environmental Monitors for Museums, Archives, and Art Galleries; Bulletin Technique 3. Canadian Conservation Institute, 1989.

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Society, Ontario Historical, ed. Memorandum to accompany the plans of the restoration of Old Fort York: Submitted to the representatives of the historical military and patriotic societies at a meeting in the Canadian Institute, 12th January, 1909. [Toronto?: s.n., 1996.

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(Editor), J. R. Kelso, and J. H. Hartig (Editor), eds. Methods of Modifying Habitat to Benefit the Great Lakes Ecosystem (Cisti (Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Informa). Canadian Government Publishing, 1995.

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Conference papers on the topic "Canadian Conservation Institute"

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Chillamcharla, G. K., K. P. Thiagarajan, and F. Winsor. "Mooring Analysis of a Weathervaning FPSO in Bi-Directional Sea-States." In ASME 2009 28th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2009-80053.

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Experimental studies were carried out at the Institute for Ocean Technology, Canada, in collaboration with the University of Western Australia (UWA) to assess the response of a moored 1:60 scaled Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) model in bi-directional seastates. The seastates comprise of a regular swell approaching in the head sea condition, and a JONSWAP wind sea approaching at various angles. The FPSO was moored in position by four spring-loaded mooring lines attached to an internal turret about which the model could weathervane. Previous papers by the authors have described the unpredictable yaw instability of the FPSO driven by long period swells, which was evidenced in the experiments. This creates difficulties in comparing motions from unidirectional and bi-directional seas, because the headings alter the response. However, the mooring tensions are relatively immune to yaw instabilities and this paper discusses effects of bi-directional seas on the mooring tensions. Numerical simulations are conducted using a time domain analysis software which simulates the motions of floating and moored structures in response to irregular seas. Simulations based on the software when compared with model tests at 45, 60 and 90 deg separation between the sea and swell shows reasonable agreement in terms of mooring tensions. Simulations are then conducted for a range of separation angles, and the effects of bi-directionality are further evaluated. It is found that a linear addition of the individual seastates can produce non-conservative results, which reinforces the fact that bi-directional seastates are important considerations for offshore operations of an FPSO.
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