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Subject:

FW: URGENT! NORTH NORFOLK GEOLOGY MUSEUM: PROPOSAL TO BE AXED

From:

"Curl, Julie" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Curl, Julie

Date:

Fri, 10 Jan 2003 17:48:23 -0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Hello Zooarch members,

I don't know if anyone would be prepared to support this....

It is to do with cuts at the Norwich (Norfolk, England) museum and
terminating work on the most exciting pile of bones to be found in
Norfolk just to save (in the short-term) £20,000! The elephant display
would eventually bring in lots of visitors. If anyone wants to know more
about the elephant then contact Nigel at the address below or me (Julie)
via Zooarch - this project is something I have worked on for 12 years
(on and off) and I don't intend to see it 'mothballed' in a store where
it can't be accessed!!!

If you can do anything to help it would be much appreciated.
Thank you for your time.

Julie
--
Julie Curl
Finds Researcher/Faunal Remains Specialist
Norfolk Archaeological Unit
13-15 Cathedral Street 
Norwich
NR1 1LU

Tel: 01603 - 878206
Mobile: 07870 818752
E-mail: [log in to unmask]




Subject: URGENT! NORTH NORFOLK GEOLOGY MUSEUM: PROPOSAL TO BE AXED



URGENT!

NORTH NORFOLK GEOLOGY MUSEUM: PROPOSAL TO BE AXED

WE NEED YOUR HELP AND SUPPORT

Please take a few minutes to read the following. The first paragraph and
the 
last two are especially important. Thank you for your time.

Many of you have been involved over the last year with developing plans
for a 
new geology, palaeontology and climate change museum (to include the
West 
Runton Elephant material) to be located in North Norfolk near Cromer. 
Unfortunately this project is about to be terminated as part of the
shocking 
£363,000 worth of cuts that the Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service
is 
being forced to implement.

BACKROUND
In addition to this innovative project being terminated three of our
smaller 
museums are to close completely with the loss of many jobs, and once
again 
curatorial posts have been a prime focus of the cuts and in particular
natural 
history. Three years ago there were four full-time curators in the
natural 
history Department, now there is only one. As usual, not a single
management 
position has been cut despite four of the management posts being newly
created 
in the last three years. Incredibly, this is all taking place just a
couple of 
months before we know what the funding implications will be of the
long-awaited 
Regional Hubs system. Yet this museum service is supposed to be the
regional 
hub for the whole of the eastern regions.

THE PROPOSED NEW MUSEUM
In addition to displaying the huge, spectacular and unique West Runton
Elephant 
and having permanent exhibitions dedicated to the sciences of geology, 
palaeontology, environmental change and climate research, the proposed
new 
museum was intended to house Norfolk Museums Services' nationally and 
internationally important geology collection. This geology collection
includes 
hundreds of Type, Figured and Noted specimens and has the best
collection of 
Pleistocene fossil mammals outside the Natural History Museum in London.
The 
international importance of this material greatly assisted the whole
museum 
service in attaining Designation Status from the Museum and Galleries 
Commission just a few years ago. Scientifically it is the most important

collection in the whole of the Museums Service. This collection, despite
its 
importance and the need to be available for research, has already been
in 
temporary accommodation for the last three years (and has been moved
twice in 
that time) since being moved out of the Castle Museum during the
Redevelopment 
Project. The collection is currently completely inaccessible to
researchers and 
enthusiasts, lying in crates in an unguarded warehouse. There has been
no 
geology on display in a museum within the county of Norfolk in the last
three 
years, with the exception of one small tabletop case in Cromer. Despite 
environmental studies and climate change featuring increasingly
strongly 
within the National Curriculum.

The proposed new geology/climate change Museum was intended to rectify
these 
issues by drawing on major capital funding from outside the Museums
Service 
(European funding and Heritage Lottery Fund). The Museum Service was not

providing a budget for the development of the project and all the work
has been 
undertaken within a curatorial post. This post is also about to be axed
along 
with the project. Therefore no great savings are being made other than a

portion of a salary, despite the magnitude of what could be gained if
the 
project went ahead. The project was to include the much needed
conservation and 
documentation of the collection. The facility was supposed to provide
permanent 
suitable storage for the collections, provide complete access to the 
collections for researchers and enthusiasts, and to display world-class 
material from a wealth of geological, palaeontological and
archaeological sites 
in the region, focusing on the extreme climate changes of the past two
million 
years and how they are recorded in our landscape. This would have
included 
specimen-rich displays showcasing fossils and Old Stone Age archaeology
from: 
the UK's best Neanderthal site discovered just last year; the oldest
hominid 
site in North West Europe, and West Runton - including one of the
largest 
elephant skeletons ever found. A detailed chronology of European climate

changes during the Pleistocene and Holocene were to be addressed with
specific 
specimen-rich displays of local examples from within our collections.
Other 
displays would have recounted the history of climate change research,
current 
research techniques, forecasting climate changes expected in the future,
and 
how to reduce or mitigate these changes through lifestyle choices. The
building 
itself was to have been part of the display, designed to be completely 
ecologically sound and generating all it own electricity (possibly with
an 
offshore windfarm) and generating zero emissions - as any museum
specialising 
in climate change should do. Now none of this will be displayed in any 
capacity. The siting of the facility near Cromer in North Norfolk was
important 
as it is a unique location where visitors can see a wide range of
geological 
deposits in the cliffs and foreshore, representing everything from warm,

shallow, tropical seas to glacial conditions just a few steps away from
a 
Museum dedicated to the subject.

The Museum was to be North Norfolk's only all weather, year-round
tourist 
attraction, and would have provided a great economic boost to the area
as well 
as providing a much needed educational facility. It would also have
provided 
the only temporary exhibition space in North Norfolk and housed study
rooms, a 
lecture theatre and extensive lab facilities for visiting schools and
students. 
Located right on the coast it would also have provided a refreshing
combination 
of field study centre as well as museum and tourist attraction.

This project has been strongly endorsed by a partnership with North
Norfolk 
District Council and the University of East Anglia's Climate Change
Unit, Earth 
Sciences Department and Tyndall Centre. Although these organisations
gave their 
wholehearted support to what they thought was a great idea for the
region 
economically and for the benefit of science and education nationally,
there is 
nothing they can do to progress the project forward once it has been
terminated 
by the Museums Service. 

Not only will we lose the chance to build Europe's only Climate Change
museum, 
to educate people about the interrelated subjects of palaeontology,
geology, 
archaeology, biology, natural climate change, anthropogenic climate
change and 
how we can change the future, but to all intents and purposes we are
losing the 
geology collection. It will become even less accessible than it has ever
been, 
with no curator left within the museum service with any knowledge of its

contents. There are no alternative plans to house, display, or preserve
the 
collection. The West Runton Elephant will never go on public display.

PLEASE HELP - TIME IS VERY SHORT

The Director of our Museums Service will be meeting with Norfolk County 
Council's Joint Museums Committee on January 17th - just next Friday -
to 
explain in detail how the cuts are going to be executed and what savings
will 
be made. It is up to this Committee to allow the cuts to go ahead, or 
alternatively to give individual posts or projects a reprieve.

It is possible that if enough letters of support for the project are
received 
by the Joint Museums Committee by next Friday, this new geology/climate
change 
museum project might be given a reprieve. If there are no protests at
its 
demise from people who care then it will certainly not be spared and the

geology collections will remain inaccessible for a very long time
indeed.

Please could you support this project by spending just ten minutes
writing a 
letter of support for the project if you feel you are able. Send letters
or 
emails to Councillor Heather Bolt (address below), and also please send
copies 
of your correspondence to the three other individuals whose details are
below.

Please pass this email on to anyone you think would be interested, and
remember 
that we have only one week to make a difference! Feel free to contact me
for 
more details. Many thanks indeed for your support.

With best wishes, Nigel Larkin.

Please send letters to:

County Councillor Mrs Heather Bolt 
Chairman of the Norfolk Joint Museums Committee
C/o Democratic Services, Norfolk County Council, County Hall,
Martineau Lane, Norwich. NR1 2DH.
Email: [log in to unmask]

Vanessa Trevelyan, Director,
Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, Shirehall, Market Avenue,
Norwich, 
Norfolk. NR1 3JQ.
Email: [log in to unmask]
 
Councillor Mrs Hilary Nelson,
5 Alexandra Road, Sheringham, Norfolk. NR26 8HU.
  
If you do not mind your letter appearing in the public domain, then
please send 
a copy to a very pro-museums, pro-geology local journalist Paul Hill:

Paul Hill, Public Affairs Correspondent, Eastern Daily Press, Prospect
House, 
Rouen Road, Norwich. NR1 1RE.
Email: [log in to unmask]

MANY THANKS INDEED.

Nigel R. Larkin BA MSc  Telephone 07973 869613 fax: 01603 493623
Curator and Conservator, The Natural History Department,
Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service,
Norwich Castle Study Centre Shirehall,
Market Avenue, Norwich, Norfolk. NR1 3JQ.
http://www.norfolk.gov.uk/tourism/museums

Associated Member of the "Ancient Hominid Occupation of Britain Project"
http://www.nhm.ac.uk/hosted_sites/ahob/



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