Digital Preservation Selection Process at NAL
The National Agricultural Library (NAL) seeks to
digitize USDA
titles according to internal best practices. These best
practices have been developed over the years through
NAL
experience, which has been informed by experience and
research conducted by the Cornell University Preservation
Department as well as the University of Virginia Electronic
Text Center. These best practices are the minimum standard
for digital preservation projects and may be found in
the most recent NAL
SOW for digitizing services. Materials reformatted for
preservation purposes are also made available online
through the NAL
Preservation web site.
In selecting for preservation, the NAL Electronic Preservation
Committee (EPC) takes into consideration the NAL responsibility
within the National Preservation Program for Agricultural
Literature (NPPAL) as well as the preservation needs
of its own collections. To leverage its resources most
effectively, NAL
seeks opportunities to serve both interests.
Within the NPPAL,
NAL is responsible for preserving
federal documents related to agriculture as well as
pre-1862 imprints and local manuscript collections.
For preservation through digital reformatting, priority
is given to federal documents, particularly those produced
by USDA.
Within this category, NAL seeks to determine
which USDA
imprints are on the list of core historical
agriculture literature developed by Cornell University.
Because they are USDA
materials, NAL preserves these,
even though Cornell is assuming responsibility for the
core historical literature at large.
The first journal digitized for preservation, the
Journal
of Agricultural Research (1913-1949) is on
this core list. The second journal to be digitized,
the USDA
Yearbook of Agriculture, is on the list of
most highly referenced scholarly journals. Other titles
previously digitized for preservation are
The Animal Parasites of Sheep
(1890), and Message
from the President of the United States...
(1902). These items were selected early in the digital
preservation efforts of the library and were chosen
in part for the type of material contained in them and
thus as a test for digital preservation. Current digital
reformatting efforts are directed at the
USDA Home and
Garden Bulletin Series, a significant collection of
interest to scholars, field researchers, as well as
the American public.
In 1995 the NAL Electronic Preservation Committee (EPC)
developed well thought out and thorough selection guidelines
for digitizing. These guidelines may be found on the
NAL preservation home page at http://preserve.nal.usda.gov/projects/criteria.htm.
The guidelines were approved by the EPC chair soon after
her arrival in 1997. The EPC is using its NPPAL responsibilities
as a selection guide in conjunction with the NAL guidelines.
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