10 research outputs found

    HISTORIANS AT WORK IN THE SLAC ARCHIVES: An Archivist’s Perspective

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    Active collecting of the archives of the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory – as well as of other US national laboratories – began in earnest in the late twentieth century as a result of the interest and agitation by both Historians of Science and Archivists. This paper examines the use and dissemination of knowledge of the histories of the US science laboratories as exemplified by the SLAC Archives and History Office (AHO) experience. We find that the development of the SLAC AHO program has been and continues to be propelled by ongoing exchanges between the two disciplines, shaped by their sometimes limited understanding of each other’s goals, methodologies, and constraints, and by the two disciplines ’ relationships to the records-creating scientists

    Recovering From a Major Disaster

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    SLAC-PUB-9686 FUTURE PROOF FOR PHYSICS: Preserving the Record of SLAC

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    Invited talk presented at Future proof: delivering scientific archives in the twenty-first century (Co-operation on the Archives of Science), 4/9/2003-4/11/2003, Edinburgh, Scotland Paper provides a brief introduction to SLAC, discusses the origins of the SLAC Archives and History Office, its present-day operations, and the present and future challenges it faces in attempting to preserve an accurate historical record of SLAC’s activities. Work supported by Department of Energy contract DE-AC03-76SF005152 What is SLAC? The idea for a two-mile linear accelerator at Stanford University was conceived in 1956, proposed in 1957, and authorized by the United States (US) Congress in 1961. Initially called "Project M, " the venture was renamed "The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center " (SLAC) in August of 1960. The original contract between Stanford Universit

    PRESERVATION DISASTER PLANNING

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