Robert S. Peabody Museum
Collections
Management and Preservation
The
museum's collection contains about 500,000 objects that represent nearly
every indigenous culture area in North America.
Collections are especially strong in the Northeast, Southeast,
Midwest, Southwest and Arctic areas of North America. The museum also
holds significant type collections from the Tehuacan Valley of Mexico
and the European Paleolithic.
Ethnographic materials, dating from around 1800 to the present, complement
the archaeological collections. These include clothing and other textiles,
utensils, weaponry, basketry and pottery. The largest collection is North
American Indian basketry. Significant Central American and South American
collections, especially textiles, supplement the archaeological holdings
from these areas.
A photographic archive of approximately 45,000 images, primarily derived
from the museum's research, and a 5,000 volume library provide documentary
support. Images include early glass plate negatives and lantern slides,
as well as more recent transparencies, negatives and prints. The research
library contains many rare volumes of archaeological and historical interest,
in addition to recent books, monographs and journals.
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