At a staggering six petabytes — or 6 million gigabytes — the National Archives' digital collection now outpaces paper holdings, attracting nearly all visitors online.
The National Archives and Records Administration is running out of space for paper records, as seen in Stack 390 on Sept. 6 in College Park, Md. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post) Thirty ...
The National Archives is using AI to help with public records requests, among other efforts to make its holdings more accessible, said Colleen Shogan, left, the Archivist of the United States, ...
In May, the museum completed a groundbreaking digitization process that brought nearly four million pressed plants online. Jack Tamisiea With the help of a conveyor belt and high-speed camera, members ...
Newly launched Guide to Public Archives equips researchers to quickly locate rich data in national, regional, local and ...
With the unenviable responsibility for housing potentially petabytes of government information that's both public and 'private', the National Archives of Australia (NAA) in Canberra is set to launch ...
The Maine and the Environment digital collection brings together items from across the Edmund S. Muskie Archives and Special Collections Library relating to and engaging with the natural environment ...
Our Digital Collections are a part of the RIT Libraries’ efforts to make many of our collections more ubiquitously available in digital form. We use LUNA web software to deliver still image, video, ...