[meteorite-list] Stolen Specimens from Iceland
From: Peter Davidson <P.Davidson_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 22 Oct 2009 09:07:37 +0100 Message-ID: <D7171847AEFC6A4893D80C75E547E27110049E_at_nmsmail02.nms2k.int> Zelimir Thank you for your message. We too have a large collection of Icelandic zeolite specimens, some of which are from Berufj?rdur. I will be travelling to the Munich Show next week. Every year we have a meeting of European Mineral curators which I organise. It is always a good chance to meet with old friends, and make new ones. Are you going? I have been a friend of Hannes and Hermi Keilmann of the Munich Show for many years now. I think I will contact them and also Rainer Bode who is involved in organising the Hamburg Show. This is a good idea - thank you. I have posted the message to mineral curators in the SMMP (Society of Mineral Museum Professionals) and the UK mailing group Geo-curators. I would urge curators in all countries to alert their national organisations. We live in a very sad World when this sort of thing can happen. But it is worse when you think that there is probably a ready market for the specimens. Best Wishes Peter Davidson Curator of Minerals National Museums Collection Centre National Museums Scotland 242 West Granton Road Edinburgh EH5 1JA Phone: +44 131 247 4283 p.davidson at nms.ac.uk www.nms.ac.uk -----Original Message----- From: Zelimir Gabelica [mailto:Zelimir.Gabelica at uha.fr] Sent: 21 October 2009 16:43 To: Peter Davidson; meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Stolen Specimens from Iceland Dear Peter, listees, Indeed, this is a terrible news, a real shame! What can be done ? We, as collectors and mineral (zeolite) lovers should (must!) act, through one way or another. Personally as a natural zeolite collector and lover, I am ready to transfer the news (Peter's mail) to anyone who might be concerned closely or from afar. As an active member of the International Zeolite Association (IZA) and elected member of two IZA sub-commissions, namely the "Synthesis Commission" and "Natural Zeolite Commission", also as a member of the International Natural Zeolite Association (INZA), I will now promptly alert the heads or responsible persons of these associations about the theft. Believing that the stolen specimens can (most probably will) also readily reach the various collector's markets (mineral shows), it could be advisable to contact the main responsibles/chairmen of the forthcoming mineral show in Europe and elsewhere. I am personally in regular contact with the organizers of the Europe's top Munich show (next edition: Oct 31, Nov 01, contacts: Johannes & Christoph Keilmann), The (biggest in Belgium) Liege mineral show (Nov 6-8, contact Roger Warin), the future Ste Marie-aux-Mines show (Euro Mineral Expo, June 24-27, 2010, Michel Schwab) and, with the help of many friends, I am ready to contact many other show organizers in Europe as well. I believe our List members from overseas can do the same for the US shows. Finally, I will contact editors of the main European mineralogical journals (I do regularly subscribe to many of them) and encourage them to put a related advertisement. Museum curators are possible candidates for contacts so I believe Peter can help here, by alerting his colleagues (or providing the appropriate addresses). It would be also appropriate that a list describing the stolen specimens, possibly with pictures, be somewhere available (Peter, is there a web site available anywhere ?). Zeolites from Berufj?rdur (Teigarhorn national park) are old and very valuable classics, world renown as true zeolite references. I have the privilege to owe a few (old specimens with genuine 19th century labels, most acquired in the 1980', 1990's from show dealers and originating from well known German and/or French mineralogical museum duplicates). They are considered among the most aesthetic of the zeolites in the mineral kingdom. Moreover, Teigarhorn is also the type locality of epistilbite. I am convinced we really must do something very promptly to try to stop thieves from dispersing this world heritage throughout the "wild market". Thank you very much Peter! My best, Zelimir At 10:07 21/10/2009, Peter Davidson wrote: >Dear List Members > >I apologise for taking you a little off-topic (like that's never >happened before!), but I would like to bring the following very >disturbing news to your attention. I know from chatting to many of you, >and I am thinking of people like Zelimir Gabelica, that not a few of you >are keen on collecting minerals, especially zeolites, so this may be of >interest to many of you out there. The message is: > >"Dear Peter > >Thank you for the information regarding the Meeting in Munich. Due to >teaching duties I will arrive only later in the afternoon and I am not >sure whether I can make it to the meeting. > >However, I would like to ask you for a favour: I just got notice from a >Swiss geologist in Iceland (a former student of mine) that the Mineral >museum at Teigarhorn in Djupivogur (Berufjord), in the heart of the >zeolite find area, has recently been robbed and a significant number of >mineral specimens have been stolen. > >http://www.mindat.org/mesg-56-156779.html > >http://www.mbl.is/mm/frettir/innlent/2009/10/17/um_500_steinum_stolid_a_ >teigarhorni/ (in Icelandic) > >According to this report 500 pieces valued around 120'000 US$. > >Christa Feucht is collecting any information regarding this incident for >the museum there. >Christa at feucht.ch >phone +354 8659857 (Iceland) >http://geothermal.is/employees/17 > >It would be great if you could circulate this information among the >members and perhaps mention this during the meeting. > >I hope still to make it to the meeting. > >With my best regards >Beda (Hofmann) >(Natural History Museum, Bern, Switzerland)" > >I would ask all of you to keep your eyes and ears open and to alert the >authorities if you hear of anything. I would also ask you to please pass >this message on to other mineral collectors, dealers and curators you >may know. > >Many thanks for your attention > >Peter Davidson >Curator of Minerals >National Museums Collection Centre >National Museums Scotland >242 West Granton Road >Edinburgh >EH5 1JA >Phone: +44 131 247 4283 >p.davidson at nms.ac.uk >www.nms.ac.uk >Salt of the Earth: famous faces with Scottish >roots, photographed by Craig Mackay. National >Museum of Scotland. Opening 16 October. > >www.nms.ac.uk/salt <http://www.nms.ac.uk/salt> >______________________________________________ >http://www.meteoritecentral.com >Meteorite-list mailing list >Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Prof. Zelimir Gabelica Universit? de Haute Alsace ENSCMu, Lab. GSEC, 3, Rue A. Werner, F-68093 Mulhouse Cedex, France Tel: +33 (0)3 89 33 68 94 Fax: +33 (0)3 89 33 68 15 Salt of the Earth: famous faces with Scottish roots, photographed by Craig Mackay. National Museum of Scotland. Opening 16 October. www.nms.ac.uk/salt <http://www.nms.ac.uk/salt> Received on Thu 22 Oct 2009 04:07:37 AM PDT |
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