[meteorite-list] Technical question about NomCom and Bulletin

Paul H. oxytropidoceras at cox.net
Sun Jun 6 12:07:35 EDT 2010


Michael Blood wrote:

"Whether or not said information does or does 
not "contribute" Or "support" illegal activity seams 
clear to me.... But perhaps I Am missing something... 
How can mere information be an act That involves 
the Meteoritical society "contributing" to "illegal 
Acts?" Information is information. It neither contributes 
nor  Prevents acts legal or illegal. 

If I write an article verifying a gold artifact was found 
in The tomb of thus & such a pharaoh in Egypt, am I 
somehow "contributing to" the act of someone stealing 
it, if, in fact, someone  Did steal it?"

Some researchers argue that authenticating and publishing 
about stolen artifacts and fossils definitely increases their 
commercial value and, thus, rewards illegal activity. They 
would argue that this also encourages the demand and trade 
in stolen artifacts and ultimately results in more artifacts 
being looted. One web page that takes this point of view is 
"This is not the “Antiques Roadshow”" at:

http://www.public.asu.edu/~mesmith9/Antiquities.html

Of course, meteorites lack many of the attributes that 
artifacts have. They are more equivalent to fossils in
the ethical problems that they pose. 

Archaeologists and paleontologists have been having 
extremely heated and often very contentious debates over 
this issue for the last 30 to 40 years without any real consensus 
being reached about whether studying and publishing on
stolen (looted) items increases their value and encourages
the illegal trade in them, which results in more artifacts or
fossils being looted. Much ink has been spilled and trees 
sacrificed in debating this issue among archaeologists and 
paleontologists without any real resolution. Some argue that
 authenticating either looted or illegally exported fossils and
artifacts by studying and publishing on them increases their 
value and makes them more sellable as commodities and in the 
long run encourages the looting of more fossils and artifacts. 
Other researchers argue that the gain in scientific knowledge that 
would otherwise be lost outweighs these concerns. Some
journals will not publish any paper based on the study of
either artifacts or fossils that have been either looted, illegally 
exported, or of uncertain provenience (also called provenance).
Other journals will publish papers based on the study of 
either artifacts and fossils that have been either looted, illegally
exported, or of uncertain provenience. Also, when the looting / 
export occurred relative to various laws being passed also 
influences what is considered either ethical or unethical.
Among archaeologists and paleontologists, which side of 
this issue is taken and too what degree, has become a personal 
judgment call of either the individual researcher conducting 
the research, people in charge of a specific organization, or 
members of the editorial board of a specific journal. There is 
no solid consensus and very diverse and often contentious 
differences of opinions exist about this issue.

Of course, as I noted above meteorites differ significantly
from artifacts in the ethical and scientific issues that are
involved.

There are many papers and books that have been written
on this topic, which take very different positions concerning 
this controversy. For example:

Brodie, N., 2005, The circumstances and consequences 
of the British Library’s 1994 acquisition of some 
Kharosthi manuscript fragments. Cultural Without
Context. no. 17 (Autumn).
http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/projects/iarc/culturewithoutcontext/issue17/brodie_british_library.htm
http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/projects/iarc/culturewithoutcontext/contents.htm

Matsuda, D., 1998, The ethics of archaeology, subsistence 
digging, and artifact looting in Latin America: point muted 
counterpoint. International Journal of Cultural Property.
vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 87-97
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?aid=279296

Scarre, C., and G. Scarre, 2006, The ethics of archaeology: 
philosophical perspectives on archaeological practice
Cambridge University Press, Chicago, Illinois.

Vitelli, K. D., and C. Colwell-Chanthaphon, 2006, Archaeological 
ethics. Rowman Altamira.

Zimmerman, L. J., K. D. Vitelli, and J. Hollowell-Zimmer 
Ethical issues in archaeology. Society for American 
Archaeology Series. Rowman Altamira, 2003

The legal travels of fossils meteorites    rocks   minerals 
(palaeo-or geo-specimen) by ICOM-NATHIST
http://www.ggwinter.de/icom/fossils_nathist.pdf

Some meteorite hunters might like the below papers.

Krowitz, E., 2003, The Battle for the Past. Cultural Without
Context. no. 13 (Autumn).
http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/projects/iarc/culturewithoutcontext/issue%2013/krowitz.htm
http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/projects/iarc/culturewithoutcontext/contents.htm

Krowitz, E., 2001, Could sale of fossils be the key to ending 
theft? Nature. vol. 414, p. 485.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v414/n6863/full/414485b.html

Yours,

Paul H.



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