-Caveat Lector-

http://www.latimes.com/news/state/20010122/t000006225.html


Ancient Bone Sales Thrive in Capitalist Era


SAN FRANCISCO--It took just 21 seconds, one bang of a wooden
mallet at the venerable Butterfields auction house Sunday and
"Reina," a 74-million-year-old diminutive leptoceratops had
reached its highest bid:  $75,000.

    Although such transactions occur quietly, controversy
surrounding them does not: The growing sales of "natural history
objects"--from trilobites to meteorites to entire dinosaur
skeletons--is stirring up museums, universities and auction
houses.

    Reina, the most controversial item offered, was not sold
Sunday because the $75,000 offered did not top the owner's
minimum bid of $120,000.

    But a Siberian woolly mammoth tusk sold for nearly $32,000
and a small fossil turtle went for $18,400 to the chagrin of UC
Berkeley paleontologist Kevin Padian, who argues that riches like
Reina--one of only two known slender horned faced
dinosaurs--belong in museums and not on the living room floors of
rich collectors.

    It hurts Padian just as much to see the smaller fossils go,
as dozens of them did Sunday.

    "They'll be lost to science, to the public and to education,"
said Padian. "And they're not renewable. When they're gone,
they're gone."

    The sale of fossils is big business, bringing in about $40
million annually. Those auctioned Sunday brought in $160,000.

    The charge that science is being robbed irritates David
Herskowitz, director of natural history for California-based
Butterfields, a leading purveyor of such goods and the world's
fourth largest auction house.

    "I have a lot of things that are extremely rare, like that
woolly mammoth horn," he said in an auction preview room that
included a nest of 17 raptor eggs, a 1,267.5-carat opal and two
mating insects trapped in amber. "But I do not sell anything
that's crucial to science."

     That point is debatable to scientists. Padian contends that
scholars and not profiteers should decide what is crucial. But
Herskowitz said he does keep science in mind.

     Take Reina. Only 60% of her bones are real; the rest of her
skeleton has been filled in. Herskowitz said the other
leptoceratops that has been found is 70% complete and will be
sold only to a museum. The two dinosaurs were unearthed from
private land in northern Montana by a company called Canada
Fossils.


     Shadowy Trade in Bones

     What also worries scientists is a shadowy and sometimes
illicit trade in bones: those who steal fossils from the ground
and sell them on the black market. Thieves can ruin fossils,
sites and years of scientific work as they did in eastern Utah
last spring, destroying a massive and nearly complete
stegosaurus.

     A multi-agency federal task force called Operation Rockfish
has recovered more than $7 million worth of stolen fossils--and
discovered that most fossil thieves are suspected felons. One
thief was arrested trying to swap a triceratops skull for $60,000
in cocaine.

     Forgeries also are a problem, and seem to be on the rise
because of the growing private market for fossils.

     A notorious forgery was discovered last year after it had
been touted on National Geographic's cover as the "missing link"
between dinosaurs and birds. The specimen turned out to be the
clever work of Chinese farmers who patched the tail of a dinosaur
onto the body of a fossil bird to increase value.

     Such forgeries, said Padian, are among the damaging legacies
of the commercial fossil trade. The average Chinese villager
"earns only a meager salary by Western standards," Padian wrote
in a recent editorial. "The lure of money from fossil dealers is
difficult to resist."

     A worse crime--and this is the rare item on which Padian and
Herskowitz agree--is committed by those commercial fossil hunters
who excavate things without carefully recording their location,
the exact "death position" of the bones and other fossils
associated with the bones. That information may have no direct
market value, but it is priceless to paleontologists.

     "Professional collectors aren't interested in that
information," said Padian, a dinosaur expert noted for his work
on determining the origin of birds and flight. Many commercial
hunters refuse to disclose exactly where bones were found for
fear of competition at their site.

     Although savvier fossil hunters are learning that scientific
information enhances fossil value, Herskowitz acknowledges that
there could be improvements.

     "In every industry there are bad guys," said Herskowitz, who
should know: The high-energy New Yorker used to be in the gem
business, trading diamonds and other jewels in the former Soviet
Union.

     In 1992, a speck in a piece of amber caught his eye. Rather
than rendering the stone worthless, the speck turned out to be a
trapped fly that sent the value of the nugget spiraling from $6
to $300.

     Two years later, the movie "Jurassic Park" opened, cementing
America's love affair with dinosaurs and exploding the market for
insects trapped in amber. "That's when I got really interested,"
said Herskowitz.

     Paleontologists have long enjoyed a relationship with
amateur collectors. The backbones of most museum fossil
collections are former private collections.

     The deep rift seen today, said Padian, stems from the advent
of commercial collectors and the growing commerce associated with
fossils.  Padian's museum, the UC Berkeley Museum of
Paleontology, will no longer identify fossils for collectors.
"We've gotten very cynical," he said. "The first question is,
'What is it?' The second question is, 'What is it worth?' "

     The debate now centers on who should be able to collect
America's fossils. It is a federal crime to steal fossils from
public lands. Academic dinosaur hunters can dig up the bones from
public land with permits, but only if the bones are then placed
in a museum; all fossils remain the property of the U.S.
government. Digging up and selling fossils from private land is
legal.

     Some Western senators, including Tom Daschle, a South Dakota
Democrat, are looking for ways to loosen restrictions on fossil
hunting--something Padian and the Society for Vertebrate
Paleontology strongly oppose.

     The society would also like to see a ban on the export of
fossils dug up in the United States as a way to ensure that any
scientifically valuable fossils--even if they come from private
land--are maintained in museums for study and public view.

     "We believe these are part of the whole country's heritage,"
said Ted J.  Vlamis, a Wichita, Kan., businessman and president
of the group Save America's Fossils for Everyone.

     A 1995 poll commissioned by the Dinosaur Society and the
Society of Vertebrate Paleontologists found that 61% opposed the
sale of scientifically important fossils and that 91% thought
that museum or university personnel should be the ones to dig up
fossils.

     Commercial fossil hunters vehemently disagree, and say the
more people who collect fossils responsibly, the more fossils
there will be--for science and for the marketplace.

     "Things are being lost to science because we don't have
enough people out there looking. There are not enough degreed
paleontologists or tax dollars . . . to look at nearly a
half-billion acres of public lands, let alone private lands,"
said Marion Zenker, marketing coordinator for the Black Hills
Institute in South Dakota, a leading commercial fossil excavator.

     Zenker, a plain-spoken former tractor-trailer driver and
mother of eight, said academic hunters "act like the high priests
of paleontology."

     Some of their brethren agree. Robert Bakker, the Harvard and
Yale trained paleontologist who helped advance the idea that
dinosaurs were warmblooded, has said many of his colleagues
promote a class system. "We guys with PhDs think we have a
God-given right to dictate where and how specimens are
collected"--something Bakker said is not in the public interest.

     Zenker adds that scientific credentials should not be the
only entry into a fossil dig: "The people who are in this field
are here because they love fossils."


     Digs by Private Parties

     Zenker's Black Hills Institute is the organization that
found Sue, the world's most famous tyrannosaurus rex. And the
world's most costly.

     Sue sold at a Sotheby's auction in 1997 for an eye-popping
$8.4 million--leading many to fear that important dinosaur
fossils would remain out of the reach of cash- strapped museums.
Sue's story ended happily;  corporate benefactors sponsored her
donation to Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History.

     Fears of dinosaur price inflation have not materialized.
Sue, a celebrity after a vicious court battle over her ownership,
may have been a one-time deal. Another T-rex fizzled in two
Internet auctions last year and was withdrawn from sale.

     Compared to the spiraling prices of the art world, dinosaurs
have remained relatively affordable. "Natural history is cheap,"
said Herskowitz.

     While it is reported that Nicolas Cage and Bill Gates are
fossil collectors, most of those attending Sunday's auction keep
much lower profiles. One customer was Dennis Widman, a San Jose
orthodontist who has loved dinosaurs since he was a child in
Fresno.

     "There's so much beauty in it," he said. "Every species is
an art form."

     Although he likes to keep his private clients satisfied,
Herskowitz is happiest when his specimens wind up in museums.
Last year, an extremely valuable fossil, the first gliding
reptile Icarosaurus siefkeri, was taken from the American Museum
of Natural History by its discoverer, Alfred Siefker, and put up
for sale to cover stroke-related medical expenses.

     When a retired Bay Area developer and bird lover named Dick
Spight stepped in to buy the fossil for $167,500, Padian
persuaded him to donate the fossil back to the museum, where it
now resides--making everyone happy.

     As for Reina's fate? She may well end up on the auction
block again. Or she could find a home in a museum--if a donor can
be found to pony up the $100,000 that would be needed to purchase
her.

     After all, said Herskowitz, "we're looking for proper homes
for all these specimens."


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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