Found 17 museum Experts and Expert Witnesses.
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| Appraiser of Fine Arts, Antiques and Decorative Arts
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| 30+ years of Marketing, Advertising, Media & Communication. Experienced. Fast. Creative. Problem Solver. Graduate Marketing Instructor at USC. Advertising Agency & Client Problem Solver.
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| Chartered Mechanical Engineer, Corporate Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, specialist in automotive plastics product development. Speaks Spanish, German and French.
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| Professional trader, broker and investor for 15 years.
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| public safety, night club, caberet security requirments, counterterrorism and emergency preparedness, risk assessments and testimony to congressional and municipal committees and panels.
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| We are Accredited and Certified personal property appraisers and expert witnesses. We over thirty years expersience.
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| Over 20 years of expertise in Jewelry and Gems forensic analysis, expert testimony, case review, trial preparation, lost profit analysis, damage calculations, industry practices, technical issues, business valuations, and fraud....
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| Expertise in many project types including but are not limited to retail, office, light industrial, restaurants, medical/dental, educational, recreational, civic and residential projects.
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| Established in 1932 O'Toole-Ewald Art Associates is well-known in the fields of art and furniture and decorative art appraisal.
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| Eileen Duignan-Woods,PE, and her expert staff at E.D.W. Associates,Inc., utilize critical analysis and many years of construction and design experience to explain solve problems.
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| Experts in construction, accidents, dispute resolution, claims, scheduling, delays, defects, standards of care, estimating, OSHA investigations, and litigation support.
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| Marketing Executive. Client experienced. Advertising Agency background. Professor at USC, CSUN, LMU, Pepperdine University.
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| EW #2194 is a recognized expert in the field of air traffic control, and has 5 decades of experience including 12 years on the FAA Evaluation and Investigations Staff.
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| Served as the Principal-in-Charge on over 300 successfully completed environmental projects, many of which have involved litigation support or regulatory negotiations with Federal and state agencies.
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| EW #3082 is an expert in the Use of Force/Firearms and is director of Tactical Handgun Training which is involved in high-profile cases for Use of Force, Firearms and aspects of Psychophysiology during lethal force encounters....
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| EW #452 has his P.E. and ss an expert witness his engineering analysis has won two million-dollar lawsuits. Available for depositions, and court testimonies.
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| EW #4475 has a private practice in Philadelphia,is Professor of Periodontics at U. of Pennsylvania, School of Dental Medicine and Director, Dental Implant Center at Albert Einstein Medical Center.
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| Looking for a museum expert?
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Find Museum experts and consultants for Museum litigation support at www.ewitness.com. Available to be Museum expert witnesses and provide Museum forensic consulting in Museum litigation, in addition prepare Museum expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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Categories To Find "Museum" Experts:
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ADMIRALTY / MARITIME |
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Admiralty law (usually referred to as simply admiralty and also referred to as maritime law or Law of the Sea) is a distinct body of law which governs maritime questions and offenses. Under conventions of international law, the flag flown by a ship generally determines the source of law to be applied in admiralty cases, regardless of which court has personal jurisdiction over the parties. This has led some ships to fly flags of convenience.
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ANTIQUES |
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Antiques (Latin antiquus, old) are objects which have reached an age which makes them a witness of a previous era in human society.
Antiques are usually objects which show some degree of craftsmanship, or a certain attention to design such as a desk or the early automobile. In a consumer society, an antique is above all an object whose atypical construction and age give it a market value superior to similar objects of recent manufacture. Any historical museum makes a considerable use of antiques in order to illustrate historical events and give them a practical context.
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ARCHITECTURE |
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Architecture (from Latin, architectura and ultimately from Greek, αρχιτεκτων, "a master builder", from αρχι- "chief, leader" and τεκτων, "builder, carpenter")[1] is the art and science of designing buildings and structures. A wider definition would include within its scope the design of the total built environment, from the macrolevel of town planning, urban design, and landscape architecture to the microlevel of creating furniture. Architectural design usually must address both feasibility and cost for the builder, and function and aesthetics for the user.
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ART / ARTIFACTS |
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A cultural artifact is a human-made object which gives information about the culture of its creator and users. The artifact may change over time in what it represents, how it appears and how and why it is used as the culture changes over time. This can also be seen in biofacts. A biofact represents biotechnological changes in a living entity, according to cultural visions.
Representation is a topic in visual arts, music and literature, it concerns the depiction and ethical and political concerns of image construction and narrativity.
Abstract art is sometimes called non-representational art and absolute music is called non-representational music.
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AVIATION |
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Aviation or Air transport refers to the activities surrounding mechanical flight and the aircraft industry. Aircraft, include fixed wing (airplane) and rotary wing (helicopter/autogyro) types, as well as lighter-than-air craft such as balloons and airships (also known as dirigibles).
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BUS ACCIDENT |
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A bus is a large, motorized, wheeled vehicle intended to carry numerous persons in addition to the driver. The name is a shortened version of omnibus, which means for everyone.
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BUS TRANSPORTATION |
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A bus is a large, motorized, wheeled vehicle intended to carry numerous persons in addition to the driver. The name is a shortened version of omnibus, which means for everyone.
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CIVIL RIGHTS - EQUAL RIGHTS |
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Civil rights are the protections and privileges of personal liberty given to all citizens by law. Civil rights are distinguished from "human rights" or "natural rights"; civil rights are rights that are bestowed by nations on those within their territorial boundaries, while natural or human rights are rights that many scholars claim ought to belong to all people. For example, the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) argued that the natural rights of life, liberty, and property should be converted into civil rights and protected by the sovereign state as an aspect of the social contract. Others have argued that people acquire rights as an inalienable gift from a god or at a time of nature before governments were formed.
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CRYOGENICS |
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Cryogenics is a branch of physics (or engineering) that studies the production of very low temperatures (below −150°C, −238°F or 123K) and the behavior of materials at those temperatures. Cryonics is the nascent technology of cryopreserving humans and animals with the intention of future revival. Unlike cryogenics and cryobiology, cryonics is not an established science and is viewed with skepticism by most scientists and doctors today (although there are many scientists involved in cryonics[1]). As a technology, cryonics seeks to apply the results of many sciences, including cryobiology, cryogenics, rheology, emergency medicine, etc.
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DOORS AND GATES |
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A door is a generally floor-length opening in a wall (or other partition), often equipped with a hinged or sliding panel which can be moved to leave the opening accessible, or to close it more or less securely. Doors are nearly universal in structures of all kinds (especially houses and other buildings), allowing passage between inside and outside, or among internal rooms. Doors are also found in vehicles, cupboards, cages, etc. A gate is a point of entry to a space enclosed by walls, or an opening in a fence. Gates may prevent or control entry or exit, or they may be merely decorative.
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ELEVATOR |
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An elevator is a transport device used to move goods or people vertically. Outside North America, elevators are known more commonly as lifts, although the word elevator is familiar from American movies and television shows, just as some Americans are aware of lift from imported entertainment. Other languages may have loanwords based on either elevator (e.g. Japanese) or lift (e.g. Cantonese). Because of wheelchair access laws, elevators are often a requirement in new buildings with multiple floors.
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FOREST PRODUCTS |
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Forest Products - Logging, Logging Rights, Clear cutting, wood pulp, paper industry, US Forestry Service.
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HORSES |
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The horse (Equus caballus or Equus ferus caballus) is a sizeable ungulate mammal, one of ten modern species of the genus Equus. Horses have long been one of the most economically important domesticated animals, and have played an important role in the transport of people and cargo for thousands of years. Most notably, horses can be ridden by a person perched on a saddle attached to the animal, and are also widely harnessed to pull objects like wheeled vehicles or plows. In some human cultures, horses are also widely used as a source of food. Though isolated domestication may have occurred as early as 4500 BC, clear evidence of widespread use by humans dates to no earlier than 2000 BC, as evidenced by the Sintashta chariot burials, thus firmly establishing the domestication of the horse.
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MARINE & MARITIME |
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From the latin "maritimus", maritime refers to things relating to the sea. Maritime law (also referred to as Admiralty law) is a distinct body of law which governs maritime questions and offenses.
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MEDICAL DEVICES |
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A medical device is an instrument, apparatus, implement, machine, contrivance, implant, in vitro reagent, or other similar or related article, including a component part, or accessory which is:
recognized in the official National Formulary, or the United States Pharmacopoeia, or any supplement to them,
intended for use in the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, in man or other animals, or
intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of man or other animals, and which does not achieve any of its primary intended purposes through chemical action within or on the body of man or other animals and which is not dependent upon being metabolized for the achievement of any of its primary intended purposes.
as defined by the US FDA.
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MEDICINE / HEALTH |
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Find MEDICINE / HEALTH experts and consultants for MEDICINE / HEALTH litigation support. Available to be MEDICINE / HEALTH expert witnesses and provide MEDICINE / HEALTH forensic consulting in MEDICINE / HEALTH litigation, in addition prepare MEDICINE / HEALTH expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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PLASTICS |
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Plastic covers a range of synthetic or semisynthetic polymerization products. They are composed of organic condensation or addition polymers and may contain other substances to improve performance or economics. There are few natural polymers generally considered to be "plastics". Plastics can be formed into objects or films or fibers. Their name is derived from the fact that many are malleable, having the property of plasticity. Plastics are designed with immense variation in properties such as heat tolerance, hardness, resiliency and many others. Combined with this adaptability, the general uniformity of composition and light weight of plastics ensures their use in almost all industrial segments.
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TEXTILES |
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A textile is any type of material made from fibers or other extended linear materials such as thread or yarn (1). Classes of textiles include woven, crocheted, knitted, knotted (as in macrame) or tufted cloth, and non-woven fabrics such as felt. Materials made from fibers such as fiberglass, carbon fiber, and ceramic fiber which are infiltrated by a matrix of another material are considered fiber-reinforced composite materials.
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Museum Experts Witnesses - Museum Forensic Consultants.
Find Museum experts and consultants for Museum litigation support. Available to be Museum expert witnesses and provide Museum forensic consulting in Museum litigation, in addition prepare Museum expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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