1. Ross S. Changing Trains at Wigan: Digital Preservation and the Future of Scholarship (National Preservation Office, 2000), p. 24, cached version: [accessed 27 January 2012]. Authors’ note: — Due to the transient nature of web material we have included cached versions of all web citations. This ensures that material cited today will be available for future readers, making today’s research more accountable, rigorous, accessible, and professional.
2. Brindley L. Filling in a Digital Black Hole (London: British Library, 2009), cached version: [accessed 2 March 2012].
3. Tredinnick L. ‘Rewriting History: The Information Age and the Knowable Past’, in Information History in the Modern World, ed. by T. Weller (Basing- stoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), pp. 175–98. For a more conceptual discussion, see T. Weller, History in the Digital Age (Oxford: Routledge, 2012).
4. For more details of the interviews, please contact the lead author, Lena Roland.
5. Beagrie N.
Jones M. Preservation Management of Digital Materials: A Handbook (London : British Library , 2001 ), p. 24 .