Water Leak Detection
Introduction
The "ten agents of deterioration" are a conceptual framework developed by the Canadian Conservation Institute (CCI) that is used to categorize the main causes of change, loss or damage to cultural heritage objects (such as gallery, library, archive and museum collections).[1] Also known as the “agents of change”, the framework was first developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The defined agents reflect and systematize the main pathways of physical deterioration and chemical to which most physical materials are subject. They have an important influence on the applied practice of conservation, restoration and collections management, and find particular use in risk management for cultural heritage collections.
The CCI defines ten 'agents': dissociation, fire, incorrect relative humidity, incorrect temperature, light and ultraviolet radiation, pests, pollutants, physical forces, thieves and vandals (sometimes called 'criminals') and water. The number of primary agents has remained the same since 1994 with the addition of "custodial neglect" (now called dissociation), although the scope and names of some categories have been updated over time to reflect new research or ideas.
Each category can be subclassified as rare and/or catastrophic (Type 1), sporadic (Type 2) or constant/continuous (Type 3), particularly when applied to risk assessments. For example, within the category of physical forces, an earthquake may be designated as a Type 1 event; a handling accident in which an object is dropped as Type 2, and continued physical wear and tear from daily handling as Type 3.[2].
Dissociation
Dissociation refers to the loss of information associated with an object, such as provenance or location information, without which the object loses meaning or is lost. In previous versions of the framework, this was called “custodial negligence.” Dissociation can cover the loss of identification labels, the misplacement of parts of an object, or the lack of descriptive information, for example.[3] Neglecting a collection is also part of dissociation. By not doing proper research and making sure everything stays together, institutions can lose information and cause their collections to lose value.[4].
Dissociation can also be due to a natural disaster.[4].
Having a good documentation plan and electronic system backup can help mitigate damage caused by events we cannot control.