Very amusing (and valid) points, Martin!  Nobody likes to be subjected to new 
rules and restrictions, and it's easy to speculate about the potential pitfalls 
of the new BLM rules, but I tend to agree with Norm.  If the Feds were really 
viewing meteorite hunters as public enemy number one, they could have already 
been citing us for any of these offenses (and more) before the new guidelines 
were even issued.  I seriously doubt that the BLM secret police are going to be 
out in force, strip searching rock hounders on public land and conducting 
nickel tests on all rocks found in their possession.  Let's not get too carried 
away here, folks.  My guess is that this will all soon die down, the BLM will 
largely forget about us, and things will pretty much go back to the way they 
were.  Of course, I could be wrong....

It seems to me the people most likely to suffer significant scrutiny and 
potentially serious consequences are the professional hunters, especially when 
hunting highly publicized witnessed falls.  I don't know what the solution is 
for that, honestly.  Glad I'm just an amateur hunter!  Okay, I've donned my 
asbestos suit, so flame away!  ;-)

-Doug Ross


> So in any case, when you go on BLM land, in first instance you will be
> always collecting rocks there and not meteorites,
> Therefore these rules do not apply.
> 
> Or do BLM or FED officers in the field exist, who could tell a chondrite
> apart from a terrestrial rock or who could identify an achondrite by visual
> inspection?
> 
> Could be a field of job creation:   Federal Meteorite Ranger!
> 
> 
> ????
> 
> (Ehm...  the first US lunar will have a weight of 76 kgs. Do I have to smash
> the stone in pieces, to harvest year by year the allowed weight limit?
> Also it's said, that the permit fees could be calculated as a percentage of
> a fair market value - WHEN will I be charged?  Do I have a chance to
> organize a loan, or do I have to commit suicide, because I simply won't have
> the percentage of the value of the 76kgs US-lunar at hand?
> Can I invite laymen to go hunting with me, who don't need a permit, as they
> aren't commercial dealers?  They could transfer ownership of the finds to me
> in giving the finds as a gift to me, which would be no bartering.)


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