Researcher Uses Bacteria to Safely Clean Toxic Metals from Native American Artifacts
With a grant from the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training (NCPTT), Timberley Roane, associate professor of biology at the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, has been researching a means to resolve an environmental quandary involving toxic substances and artifacts such as kachina dolls, pipes, pottery, blankets, mounted animals and ceremonial masks.
"Historically, artifacts might have been treated with a variety of different pesticides to preserve the objects from insects and microbial damage," Roane said. "Two of the most prevalent pesticides that we're most concerned with now are mercury and arsenic, as the toxicity of these metals to biological systems is under review."
Roane, a Lumbee tribe member, collaborated with a Navajo friend who works with the Environmental Protection Agency to conceptualize the use of bacteria as a possible means to extract mercury from these artifacts without damaging them. Due to the presence of mercury, for example, and the risk of dermal or inhalation exposure, some of these artifacts could not be put back into cultural use.
Roane is working with bacteria already living on the artifacts that will allow her to change mercury into a gaseous form that can then be disposed of properly. This builds on her past research that uses naturally occurring bacteria for environmental cleanup.
"With funding from the NCPTT, we've been able to isolate mercury-resistant bacteria capable of removing mercury from contaminated media," she said. "We are very excited by the prospect of being able to remove mercury from treated museum materials, in hopes of mitigating the toxicity of these materials for not only repatriation to tribal members but for anyone who comes in contact with them."
Researcher Uses Bacteria to Safely Clean Toxic Metals from Native American Artifacts
Location:
USA
Timberley Roane, associate professor of biology at the University of Colorado at Denver, collects bacteria from one of the artifacts provided by the Arizona State Museum.
Credit: Timberley Roane
Copyright: NCPTT
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