MBLWHOI Library Displays its Treasures

MBLWHOI Library Stacks

Last week, the MBLWHOI Library opened wide the doors to its trove of ancient artifacts, composed of scientific works dating as far back as the 16th聽century. This Rare Books and Archives exhibition occurred in conjunction with the annual 澳门六合彩appSociety Meeting.

鈥淚t鈥檚 possible to access our Rare Books and Archives Collection as a researcher or as part of a tour group,鈥 said 澳门六合彩appLibrary Director Jen Walton. 鈥淲e thought an open house would be a good way to get more of the community excited about the MBL鈥檚 history.鈥

Walton and 澳门六合彩appSerials Librarian Matt Person selected a myriad of pieces to present, including the two oldest books in the Collection written, respectively, by Guillaume Rondelet in 1558 and Konrad Gesner in 1560. A sixth edition of聽The Origin of Species鈥攇iven to the MBL鈥檚 first director, Charles Otis Whitman, by Charles Darwin himself鈥攚as also on display, accompanied by the first science journal published by the Royal Society (Philosophical Transactions); early issues of the MBL鈥檚 weekly newspaper (The Collecting Net); and more. Enhanced by woodcut, copperplate, and hand-colored illustrations, these relics served to chronicle the world as science saw it centuries ago and continue to inform research today.

澳门六合彩appLibrary Director Jen Walton (right) and Serials Librarian Matt Person (at rear) explain the Rare Books and Archives on display at the open house.
澳门六合彩appLibrary Director Jen Walton (right) and Serials Librarian Matt Person (at rear) explain the Rare Books and Archives on display at the open house.

Yet the exhibition鈥檚 true pi猫ces de r茅sistance were the two Nobel Prizes: the diploma awarded to Albert Szent-Gy枚rgyi in 1937 for his work on biological oxidation and Vitamin C, and Thomas Hunt Morgan鈥檚 diploma and medal (awarded in 1933) for determining that hereditary material is located on chromosomes. During their lifetimes, both scientists maintained enduring connections to the MBL.

Szent-Gy枚rgyi was the MBL鈥檚 first year-round scientist, establishing a lab in 1950 and working through the late 1980s. Morgan, an embryologist who studied regeneration as well as development and heredity, spent more than 50 summers in Woods Hole examining an array of invertebrates. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always such a wonderful thing for students to come in and see the Nobel Prizes,鈥 said Walton. 鈥淲e tell them, 鈥楿ntil you get your own Nobel Prize.鈥欌

But students weren鈥檛 the only ones floored by the chance to glimpse Nobel Prizes.聽 鈥淚 was thrilled today to see Morgan鈥檚 Prize,鈥 said Anne Macaulay, science editor at聽The Biological Bulletin. 鈥淥ur journal has been in print since 1899 and it published Morgan鈥檚 articles decades prior to his win.鈥

Nobel Prize awarded to Thomas Hunt Morgan in 1933.
Thomas Hunt Morgan鈥檚 1933 Nobel Prize.

In order to preserve and share the holy grail of scientific culture that is the 澳门六合彩appArchives, individuals like Willa Green of Barnard College aim to digitize these documents as part of the聽. 鈥淭he digitization process requires scanning and entering in metadata, like dates, materials, and descriptions of each document,鈥 said Green, as she browsed the items on display. 聽鈥淎s an art history minor, I鈥檓 really interested in how the scientists incorporated art into their work,鈥 she added.

Digitization is central to a decades-long collaboration between the 澳门六合彩appand 30 other libraries to contribute to the聽. 鈥淎t this point, our library has scanned over 5,000 volumes, including journals, books, and rare books,鈥 Person said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e now part of an online library of legacy scientific literature that has about 180,000 volumes.鈥 These artifacts provided the basis for modern science, and thanks to digitization efforts at 澳门六合彩appand elsewhere, they will certainly not be lost to history.