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This paper introduces an important group of unpublished ethnographic and archival materials deriving from two expeditions to Baltistan by the American naturalist collector William Louis Abbott (1860-1935), the first in 1891-1892 and the second in 1912. This paper presents Abbott as a particular type of scientific explorer (the American ―naturalist‖), re-assesses the importance of this region to him and to Smithsonian scientists of the time, and publishes here for the first time a record of his observations and ethnographic collections from Baltistan. These ethnographic collections, alongside archival correspondence and field notes, form a little-known resource at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. This paper also summarizes the role Abbott and other ―naturalist‖ collectors of this period played within the history of anthropology and museums, and points to some of the many new 21st-century uses of ―legacy‖ collections and records of the kind he assembled about this region. Present-day museums often reach out to the descendants of peoples among whom such historic collections were made, inviting them to help interpret and display these artifacts. Museum collections can also thereby help preserve endangered cultural traditions

Paul Michael Taylor, Jared M. Koller. (2018) Baltistan in 1891 and 1912: The Smithsonian’s Baltistan Collections from two Expeditions by American Naturalist William Louis Abbott, South Asian Studies, Volume 33, Issue 1.
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