[meteorite-list] WG: Asian falls
From: Martin Altmann <altmann_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2010 15:19:58 +0100 Message-ID: <001801cba82c$a6160740$f24215c0$_at_de> Hi Jason, some of the federal laws in Australia were even earlier in place. The find numbers, correct me if I'm wrong, were produced mainly by "official" expeditions, two times Euromet (one of them at least hopelessly unsuccessful Mundrabillas, Millbillillies, three OCs - stuff in a quantity a meteorite dealer would charge you today with 15-20k$) and one carried out by the school of mines. 15 published new finds for a whole continent with deserts, where the past proved, that they are very productive for meteorite finds - and that in THE decade, where the big harvest took place in the deserts of the African, Asian, and North-American continent, is very unsatisfying, especially in a country of such a long and in former times remarkable meteorite tradition. The problem is, that since the 1990ies, no serious meteorite expedition wasn't carried out anymore by universities there, as well as the basic work (see the 500 unclassified finds) was neglected. So the Australian meteoricists fall short regarding the special meaning and status, the Aussie meteorites are given in Australian legislation. Consequently this legislation isn't tenable anymore. How meteorites are found, I think everyone of us here on the list knows, as well as those involved in Australian projects, at least partially, do know. Therefore I allow myself to criticize the legal situation and the efforts undertaken there. Some blogs of the "expeditions" there, you have on internet. A handful people, for a few days in the desert, hence less professional than any of the amateur hunters. The fireball network, I'm allowed to criticize, because it is partially financed by my tax-money, I'm generating with meteorite sales. The costs and the equipment, the goals and the predicted find rates, of this project, you'll find on internet. They admit there, and the find area and the size of the covered area are almost the best condition, one can have for meteorite finding, they admit there, that they even weren't looking for all the droppers, they were able to narrow down. Here in Europe we have fundamentally different experiences and methods with our fireball network. We learned, that whenever possible, the help and the manpower of amateur hunters has to be used, to find the stones, which the cameras had documented. Therefore the data and predicted fall areas are open to everyone. If you take Neuschwanstein for instance - hundreds of people were hunting for three years in a difficult terrain, and if you take your North American showers, we have it always here on the list, there you know, what for a large number of participants and what time-spans are necessary to generate the resulting tkws. In Australia, you have an easy accessible flat terrain with less vegetation than here in Europe, the efforts to spend to find the droppers would be much lower than here - but even that isn't done there. And keeping in mind, that the camera stations here in Europe are maintained by volunteer amateurs, cost-free, as well as the hunts are done by volunteers cost-free - and finally if I think, that the large European fireball net costs only a few thousands per year, but the small Australian net a couple of hundreds of thousands, then I can express my doubts, whether my tax-money (if I'm not allowed to use it for maintaining my yacht, my castle, my Bentley-collection, my riding horses, like almost all other meteorite dealers) couldn't be used more effectively if used for meteoritical purposes, as long as the Aussie-network methodically isn't running lege artis. The problem is, that the Australians, other than in other countries, can't avail themselves of the enormous, but free, help of amateur hunters and trained expert private hunters. Because with their laws, they created - even independently from individual mentality - legal artificial obstacles to do so. And these laws, see also the federal laws there, are an anachronism from those times, when there were still so few finds a year, that it could have been worth to try to go the way of disappropriation and cutting personal rights. Well, it turned out, and that very soon, to have been a misjudgement. I object to the Aussie meteoricists and those involved, to adhere still today to that misjudgement by all means, ignoring the experiences and stats collected over the recent decades in their own country as well as in other countries. Monetary values, Jason, I don't believe them to be an argument. At current prices it wouldn't make sense for a nomad to bend down to pick up an weathered OC. And you and your colleagues, the sparetime hunters in USA, who generate so many new finds - and there I think we're together, to find an achondrite, to find a Martian or something like Sonny's CM1 you have to generate large find rates - they are doing it because of their enthusiasm - economically it isn't lucrative. And btw. the argument doesn't hold water in the Aussie case, note that the rights of ownership aren't trimmed for the Australian tektites, and such a flanged button, you know that they fetch much higher prices than most meteorites. Also a proof that the Aussie legislation is not a naturally grown necessity, but an arbitrariness. So, that is the second problem. Those, who shoulder the laborious and time-consuming work of meteorite hunting, for fun or for profit motives, makes no difference, hence those, who generate almost all meteoritic finds outside of Antarctica and with that, the base of meteorite science, simply can't go into the Aussie desert to find the meteorites for Bevan et al. getting more happy. Third problem is, in such countries, where no meteorites are found, meteorite science has a difficult stand. And even worse, if you kill the meteorite finders and with them the meteorites, if you eliminate the private collecting culture and tradition, you will loose inevitably on the long run also your academic meteorite tradition. (Piquancy - see that Bevan, as an Englishman, doesn't espouse such rigid restrictions in his home country...) And even worse. Most finds are made in desert countries, with no meteorite science at all. If you forbid all collecting activities and with that all new finds, you can't establish a meteorite science there, because it would be obsolete. For me it is no question, that we would have dozens, if not hundreds of published Aussie meteorites more and with them, naturally, also all those scientifically more interesting finds like the rare carbonaceous ones and the planetaries, if we would have there a more civilized meteorite legislation, which reflects more the necessities of that branch of science and the modern state of art. And in this respect, I think, it is legitimate to say something against these hardliners or mules with their antiquated imaginations and their deficiencies in their working knowledge. How meteorites are and were generated for 200 years now, a meteoricists, occupied also with the complex of meteorite laws, has to know. What methods you have to apply to generate meteorites is known since the late 19th century and which methods one has to apply is known at latest since the late 1960ies from the UNESCO meteorite debate, whereof the Aussie laws are a direct result. And in my eyes it is simply dishonest to create the bugaboo, that private meteorite people would compete with scientists. That doesn't reflect the reality, neither the history. It is dishonest, to state, that those, who generated most of that, laying in the institutes, being the substance of that science, that those who made the meteorites accessible and especially in recent times also so affordable for any and all institutes and researchers around the world, also in countries, who never would be able to afford an Antarctic program, that those, who are recovering most of the new falls and increased the tkws of the historic ones, that those, who do the larger portion of the public outreach, and hence the so necessary advertizing for that branch of science, that those, who the prominent forerunners, the curators and researchers of today's scientists were working hand in hand with, that those, who do the basic work so much more efficiently and therefore cheaper for the public budgets, the very work, most meteoricists aren't able to do, due to the lack of manpower or funds or sometimes also interest, that these would be harmful for science. And especially dishonest it is, to call them parasites and to lump them together with tomb raiders, and criminals illegally trading important cultural items, in consciously misinterpreting existing laws or in creating, which is in states of laws problematic, extra laws for the singular case. Such an opinion one even can't hardly call outdated, because it never was common sense in 200 years of meteoritics. That hysteria - remember the hilarious example I gave, were - seriously! - the Antarctic meteorite group made a drama, that the Antarctic meteorites have to be protected by laws from private ownership, cause else the Huns would invade South Pole - Well, in that hysteria I see, if we let the few well-poisoners aside, simply a deficit in the technical and historical education and training of the young meteoricists. Well, to come back. Jason, if it's so, like you say, what could be said then against, to give up the Aussie restrictions? What would be then a danger? Do you believe, that then the glorious number of fifteen published new Aussie-meteorites in a whole decade would be endangered to fall short of? Where then should be a risk? And whether those people, who really know, how to find meteorites, would come to Australia, I think, we can leave to them. If they come, fine. If not - worse than the last decade it hardly can't get there. And here we are again at the essential point: All prohibitionists were over all these year not able, to deliver any indication, what a prohibition or a disappropriation has brought or even only theoretically could bring for an advantage. We all are missing the beef! And that makes the debate so strange, that one could get the impression, that it isn't about the meteorites themselves or the greater good of the individual nations or for science at all! But in principle rather a hollow (but nevertheless destructive) harping on about principles by a few egomaniacs or by people with no greater insights in meteoritics. But there might by hope. I like more such modest voices like e.g. Bland in the Gebel Kamil article, if you remember, who expressed the dilemma - if you classify the NWAs, you make the protagonistic yellers angry. If you don't, you have a short-fall of the very objects of our research. And finally someone, who gave a realistic figure of the monetary value, how neglectible the volume is - and not the grotesque fairy-tale-numbers those old bones voice against their better knowledge, to haul up that quite innocent small meteorite finding thing to a supposed crime of black-billion-marketing drugs, weapons, protected wildlife, art, archaeological items, to generate more public interest for their doubtful goals and achieving, that this ridiculously small affair could be subdued under such holy and mighty laws like e.g. the UNESCO conventions. (Strange enough, that sometimes also you hear a curator among these voices, where then the meteorite collector asks himself, if that museum or institute wouldn't do better, to employ a more skilled person, who has a more realistic idea about find volumes and meteorite prices, to save the tight budgets better..) So. Try and error. Australia made that legitimate try of prohibition - the results seems to show, that it was an error. Other countries currently try to make the same error, I guess, one should protect them against that error. If a try turns out to be an error, then one should do the next try. Now maybe, Jason, you will ask, why they should make that try at all? I would answer, na?ve as I am, because they are not my butcher from my last post, they are meteoricists and have chosen that profession for themselves. Rhetorically, as I know you, you would try perhaps to say, who are you, that you feel entitled to make such statements? Then I'll answer you - a nobody. You're correct, we can't take part in this discussion, it has to be a discussion between academically approved and appointed scientists. Meteorite finders, meteorite dealers, meteorite collectors - we're the suppliers for scientists, the pizza delivery boys only. We can't take part in that discussion, and that btw. independently from class conceit. Problem only is, if you shoot the pizza boy and if you're not able to cook by your own, you will stay hungry. ;-) Don't let North Africa, don't let Australia starve. For they know not what they do. Best! Martin -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- Von: meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com [mailto:meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Jason Utas Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Dezember 2010 09:24 An: Meteorite-list Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] WG: Asian falls Martin, All, I would like to point out that the law prohibiting the approved export of meteorites from Australia, the "Protection of Movable Cultural Heritage Act," was passed in 1986. 309 meteorites have been recovered, analyzed, and officially published in Australia since then, not including the relict iron recently found. Breaking statistics up by date alone can lead to deceiving conclusions. Most of the meteorites found in Australia in the past thirty years were found between 1990 and 1994, several years after the prohibitive laws had been passed. So, yes, it's true that relatively few meteorites have been found in Australia in the past decade. But no new laws were introduced around the year 2000, so logic would lead us to conclude that prohibitive export laws are not the culprit. Why, then, did rates fall so dramatically? I'm not sure. I'm guessing it was the influx of Saharan and NWA meteorites that caused market prices to bottom out. All of a sudden, a CK4 like Maralinga wasn't worth untold hundreds per gram. Stones like Camel Donga and Millbillillie have dropped to thirty or so percent of what they used to sell for -- and ordinary chondrites like Hamilton, Cook 007 and others now sell on ebay for cents per gram, instead of the few dollars or so they fetched ten or more years ago. And the subsistence wage in Australia is considerably higher than in Morocco (it takes more money to live above the poverty line). So while someone in Morocco might be able to live reasonably well if they sell their stones for a few cents per gram, the same is likely not true for someone in Australia. That's my best guess, anyways. If you go through the Meteoritical Bulletin, you'll notice that very few, if any, of the meteorites were actually found by meteorite dealers; they were found by Aussies, and they were found well after the passing of the 1986 law. Regards, Jason On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 6:57 PM, Martin Altmann <altmann at meteorite-martin.de> wrote: > Because I'm very content with Canada. > > They learned from the Tagish Lake debacle. > And eased afterwards the strictest interpretation, their laws allowed in > practice. > With better results following. > Buzzard Coulee got therefore a much higher tkw and a better availability for > everyone, institutions and private collectors; > you saw how suddenly new masses of Springwater were found; > or remember that crater building iron - I forgot the name. > > Never the right of ownership was challenged by Canadian laws, but only what > finders could do with their property, in past leading to such bizarre > situations, that the owner of the second St-Robert stone, desperately wanted > to sell, but was not able to do so, because no Canadian institute was > interested in, although he asked not more the Canadian survey had paid for > the 1st stone, but on the other hand, wasn't allowed to sell it outside of > Canada - a legally more than unsatisfying situation. > > Meanwhile Canadian institutes allow export clearance for all stones, they > don't need. > O.k. it's somewhat uncomfortable and takes time, but it is fair. > They pay very fair prices for Canadian finds, if they decide to acquire > them. (not anymore that funny reward proposed on radio: 100$ per stone found > of Tagish Lake ;-). > > And you don't have to forget, that in contrast to such countries with > prohibition like Algeria, Poland, Argentina with all in all no scientific > interest in meteorites, or countries with constitutionally more than > problematic laws like Australia and so on, > the Canadians maintain a real good meteorite science and a vivid > institutional collecting, > of course also including the important hot desert finds. > > So all in all, Canada would be a very good example (unfortunately so far the > ooonly example) for meteoricists like e.g. Bevan, suffering under the > unreasonable legislation of their countries, how it could be done better. > > Best! > Martin > > > > -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- > Von: meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com > [mailto:meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Chris > Spratt > Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Dezember 2010 01:26 > An: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] WG: Asian falls > > You left out Canada. > > Chris > (Via my iPhone) > ______________________________________________ > Visit the Archives at > http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > > ______________________________________________ > Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > ______________________________________________ Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Thu 30 Dec 2010 09:19:58 AM PST |
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