This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

New database improves access to archives

By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Published: January 27, 2010

Special Collections has announced the availability of a new database that vastly improves access to finding aids for UB’s unique archival collections.

An archival “finding aid” is a description of a collection, usually containing a history of the person or organization that produced the collection and an inventory of its contents.

The finding aids now are encoded in a markup language developed specially for archives called Encoded Archival Description (EAD) and provide descriptions of special collections from the University Archives, the Poetry Collection, the Law Library and the Music Library.

These collections contain a wealth of information concerning such topics as Love Canal, Watergate, several aspects of Buffalo history, political activism and university affairs, as well as major world collections of 20th-century poetry and music. The new database allows patrons to search across descriptions of all of these collections at one time.

“Finding aids were traditionally paper inventories available only on site,” says Nancy Nuzzo, director of Special Collections. “The advent of the World Wide Web made it possible to deliver finding aids to a worldwide audience online, but without sophisticated indexing or searching capabilities. The use of EAD allows for much more sophisticated indexing and more detailed searching.”

The new database was created using the eXtensible Text Framework (XTF) platform developed for the California Digital Library. It also has been adopted for similar purposes at other institutions, including Indiana University, Northwestern University, University of Georgia and the University of Sydney. The platform is open-source code available for free online download.

In addition to enabling more sophisticated searching, Nuzzo says use of the database also makes the research process more efficient for both the researcher and the holding institution. “Requests for materials can be more specific, which makes the archivists’ job of retrieval much easier,” Nuzzo says.

Click here to access the database directly. Associated pages contain information about UB’s archival collections, EAD as a format and the structure of UB’s EAD finding aids.

Nuzzo says the implementation of EAD at UB is the culmination of several years’ work and was supported in part by three Regional Bibliographic Databases Program grants awarded through the Western New York Library Resources Council.