Why This Object Matters
Wet preservation has played an important role in the history of anatomical and medical teaching collections. Fluid-filled containers made it possible to preserve delicate structures for repeated observation and comparison.
Teaching Use
In a museum context, wet preservation raises important stewardship questions. What is known about the object? Is the label stable? Is the container sealed? Has the fluid changed? Does the display provide appropriate context? This page treats wet preservation as a historical and educational topic. It does not provide preparation instructions.
Stewardship Notes
Documentation, labels, access level, sensitivity level, and display context are part of responsible preservation.
Display Considerations
Public-facing preservation content should be contextual, non-technical, and non-sensational.
Museum Interpretation Note
This page explains preservation as a historical, educational, and collection-stewardship topic. It does not provide preparation instructions, chemical procedures, or specimen-processing guidance.