[meteorite-list] Secret BLM maps battle of the Smithsonian

Meteorites USA eric at meteoritesusa.com
Fri Nov 5 12:30:48 EDT 2010


See... Part (2) that is exactly the point... and exactly the problem. 
There's no clear policy at all with regard to meteorites, meteorite 
hunting, and meteorite recovery. Different BLM offices will have 
different policies based on the discretion of the person on shift at the 
time. So if they guy or gal behind the counter has a bad morning, 
forgets their coffee, or generally has a bad day, they dictate to you 
whether you can hunt our not? Discretion? Whatever! OK so we are 
supposed to hope someone is in the "mood" to issue permission? That's 
laughable at best.

The policy part (1) is seriously flawed. There's no "law" which states 
meteorites belong to the goverment, other than mineral law which can be 
loosely applied to meteorites. Yet somehow they pick and choose which 
laws to pply when and how they "feel" like it.

I guarantee you the BLM doesn't care about the average chondrite 
meteorite. But if you find a North American Lunar, a Martian, a 6000 
pound iron, or an ultra rare carbonaceous meteorite the BLM and 
Smithsonian will probably jump up real quick and say it's theirs, and 
will try to take it from you.

Other countries sciences have been damaged by restrictive regulations 
where the government claims ownership of meteorites.

If we as Americans and as a country adopt the policy that meteorites are 
off limits to the public, we are stifling the science we're trying to 
protect.

Eric




On 11/5/2010 8:59 AM, Chris Peterson wrote:
> It's more complicated than this. The guidelines we follow at the 
> Denver Museum of Nature and Science when hunting for meteorites are 
> like this:
>
> 1. All rocks, meteorites, artifacts, etc found on public land belong 
> to the government. There is no individual right to take anything, but 
> different land administration agencies can choose to allow collection, 
> usually with specific guidelines.
>
> 2. In the case of public lands, who you seek permission from depends 
> on the administering agency. Meteorites on BLM land are not 
> automatically claimed by the Smithsonian, but meteorites on National 
> Forest or National Park land are. If searching on BLM land (which is 
> Dept of the Interior) you can seek permission from the local BLM 
> office, which generally has a lot of discretion. When seeking on 
> National Forest or National Park land, you can again seek permission 
> from the local administrator (not from the Smithsonian), but they 
> usually have little discretion. The Museum can usually get permission; 
> private parties usually not. If you are searching on state lands, you 
> have to get permission from the state administrator, and they usually 
> have no policy at all, and everything will depend on who you talk to 
> and what kind of day they are having.
>
> Chris
>
> *****************************************
> Chris L Peterson
> Cloudbait Observatory
> http://www.cloudbait.com
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Dunklee" 
> <steve.dunklee at yahoo.com>
> To: <raremeteorites at yahoo.com>; <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
> Sent: Friday, November 05, 2010 9:36 AM
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Secret BLM maps battle of the Smithsonian
>
>
>> Might we talk to the currator of meteorites at the Smithsonian to 
>> have them issue permits for the collection of meteorites on BLM land? 
>> With the required 20 gram sample going to the smithsonian. They cant 
>> tell you no you cant look for them if you are collecting them for the 
>> Government. Might be able to use a similar ploy in Austrailia. The 
>> smithsonian might even be able to make a few bucks charging $25 a 
>> year for the permits to collect thier property. Since i think it is 
>> in an act of congress that meteorites on federal land belong to the 
>> smithsonian. It would be out of BLM hands to stop you with a 
>> scientific collection permit from the smithsonian. Cheers Steve
>
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