Heratio Help Center article. Category: Collection Mgmt / Provenance.
Preservation Timeline User Guide
Overview
The Preservation Timeline is a public, per-record page that shows, honestly and read-only, the recorded digital-preservation lifecycle of a published archival record's digital objects. For one record it lists, in chronological order, each recorded preservation step - ingest, fixity checks, format identification, migrations or normalisations, and virus scans - together with the step's recorded outcome, when it ran, and the agent or tool responsible for it.
It follows the PREMIS discipline for preservation metadata: every step in a digital object's life is recorded with its outcome, its timing, and the responsible agent. Where the Authenticity Report (/authenticity/{idOrSlug}) consolidates C2PA signing and provenance signals, and the AI Inference Provenance Explorer (/inference-provenance/{idOrSlug}) shows what AI contributed to the metadata, the Preservation Timeline answers a third, distinct question: "what has actually happened to the bits of this record over time?" Open it at /preservation-timeline/{idOrSlug} - for example https://your-site.example/preservation-timeline/1234 or https://your-site.example/preservation-timeline/fonds/series/item.
What it does
The page reads the preservation record that Heratio keeps for a record's digital objects and merges every recorded step into one chronological timeline. For each event it shows:
- Step and lifecycle stage - what happened (an ingest, a fixity check, a format identification, a migration or normalisation, a virus scan) and which lifecycle stage it belongs to.
- Outcome - the recorded result of the step: success, warning, or failure. (Where a source did not record an outcome, the event is simply marked "recorded".)
- When - the timestamp of the step.
- Responsible agent or tool - the preservation process, tool, or engine that carried out the step (for example the ingest process, a checksum algorithm, a format-identification tool, or a virus-scan engine).
- Source - which preservation log the event came from (the preservation event log, the fixity-check log, the format-identification log, the migration log, or the virus-scan log).
Above the list, at-a-glance counts show the total events, how many distinct lifecycle stages are present, and how many recorded successes and failures there are. A by-stage breakdown groups the events by lifecycle stage.
A machine-readable companion is available at /preservation-timeline/{idOrSlug}.json.
Honest framing
The Preservation Timeline is a read-only view of what was recorded. It is the recorded preservation history; it is not a verdict on whether the source itself is authentic, complete, or true. When no preservation events are on file for a record, the page says so plainly - "No preservation events recorded yet" - rather than inferring or inventing a history. Absence of an event is shown as absence.
How to use it
- Open the timeline: go to /preservation-timeline/{idOrSlug}, replacing
{idOrSlug}with the record's numeric id or its slug. Only published records have a page; an unknown or unpublished reference returns a "not found" page. - Read the summary at the top for a one-line, plain-language statement of how many preservation events are recorded and across how many lifecycle stages.
- Scan the timeline, oldest first, to follow the lifecycle from ingest forward. Each event shows its outcome as a coloured badge (green success, amber warning, red failure).
- Follow the trust links at the foot of the page to the Authenticity Report and the AI Inference Provenance Explorer for the same record, to assemble the full trust picture.
- Fetch the JSON companion at
/preservation-timeline/{idOrSlug}.jsonfor a machine-readable copy.
Frequently asked questions
Why does a published record show no preservation events? Its digital objects may pre-date preservation logging, or no preservation step has been recorded for them yet. That does not mean anything is wrong - only that no automated preservation step is on file.
Is this the same as the Authenticity Report? No. The Authenticity Report consolidates C2PA content-credentials / signing and the whole-record provenance verdict. The Preservation Timeline is the PREMIS-style lifecycle of the bits: ingest, fixity, format identification, migration, virus scan. The two are complementary and link to each other.
Does opening the page change anything? No. The page is strictly read-only. It runs no preservation action, re-verifies nothing, and writes nothing.