Ms Olebogeng Suwe, Assisitant Librarian at ORI |
A paper on a
digitization initiative, presented at the SCECSAL 2014 by Ms Olebogeng Suwe,
Assistant Librarian at the Okavango Research Institute (ORI) Library, illustrates
the strategies being used to preserve special collections in libraries. The ORI
Library, a part of the University of Botswana Libraries, has a priceless
collection of maps by Peter Alexander Smith, a naturalist who traversed the
Okavango Delta, a major wetland in north-west Botswana, with a very rich flora
and fauna. Mr Smith scribbled his observations and notes on 1:50000 topographic
maps. The maps have approximately 4500 handwritten annotations of observed
flora, fauna, places and water channels within the delta, making them a very
rich and rare source of information on the flora and fauna of the Okavango
Delta.
Access to these maps is
very restricted due to their fragility. Therefore, to enhance access to the
maps, the ORI Library decided to digitize them and make them available in
digital format. This initiative was carried out in partnership with the
Geographic Information Systems Laboratory (GIS lab) of the University of
Botswana.
Key outputs of the
initiative were the following:
- The maps have been scanned and imbedded with spatial coordinates using a Geographic Information System (GIS) from the ORI GIS laboratory.
-
Annotations
on the map have been cleaned (i.e. verified and checked for errors) and are now
stored as a points in a GIS database
- The images and annotations have converted for Internet access using a GIS internet map server
Further information on the initiative: Ms Olebogeng Suwe, Assisitant Librarian at ORI, email: lebosue2004@yahoo.com OR osuwe@ori.ub.bw
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