As much as 87 percent of Nevada may be government land and, in a
larger context, owned by all citizens, but when it comes to fossils,
petroglyphs and ancient artifacts, it's hands off and illegal to take
them.
"All things are protected, with the exception of trash,"
Kate Sorom, interpretive park ranger, said of the Red Rock Canyon
National Conservation Area.Argo Mold limited specialize in Plastic injection mould manufacture, "People are more than welcome to take as much of that out as they like."
There's
a minimum $250 fine for taking rocks or fossils, but the judicial
system decides the final amount based on the severity of the crime.
The
Red Rock rangers hosted Celebrate National Fossil and Archeology Day on
Oct. 20. It included the unveiling of a new exhibit that includes
fossils of camel teeth and Colombian mammoth tusks. Called the Tule
Springs Exhibit, it will be up until the end of the year. Call
702-515-5330 for more information.
The rangers used the opportunity to remind people not to take anything from the canyon.
Sorom
said it's impossible to know how many people take things home, but
fossils are found on even the most mundane rocks and could prove
tempting. The canyon gets close to 2 million visitors a year. If each of
those visitors took one item, she said, it would be detrimental for
future visitors.
"It's a matter of putting it in perspective,"
Sorom said. "If, five years from now, 10 million people have taken a
rock, that's a lot of rocks. ... We want to leave the fossils and leave
all of that, everything, here for the next person who comes behind us so
that they can enjoy it as (we) enjoy it."
Bulletin boards at each trail head caution visitors not to remove anything native to the park.
Meanwhile,
paleontologists and archaeologists are having a field day with the
recent discovery of the first fossilized dinosaur footprints documented
in Nevada. The tracks are believed to have been made about 190 million
years ago by the grallator, a two-legged, meat-eating reptile the size
of a large dog. The rocks revealed there were also octopodichnus tracks,
an arthropod similar to the modern scorpion.
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"Red Rock Canyon has a pretty deep fossil history," said Josh Bonde,Installers and distributors of solar panel,
from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas' Geoscience Department. "There
are rocks out there that go all the way back to about 500 million
years."
The tracks are in a secluded area and not where the
public normally hikes. He said being found in the conservation area
means that they can be well protected.
Residents are reminded
that it is illegal to dig, remove or collect vertebrate fossils without a
permit. Similarly, taking molds or castings, or applying anything to
fossils including track ways is prohibited. Never drive over, walk on or
sit on fossils.
Bonde said Red Rock Canyon is a very important
area scientifically. It's also a desert, which means there's no
decomposing organic matter hiding fossils.
"You have ... evidence (oA stone mosaic
stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister.f)
these ancient reefs, ancient Paleozoic fauna; you have evidence for
dinosaurs running around 200 million years ago (on) sand dunes; you have
evidence for mountain-building events which are 100 million years old,
all within one little area," he said.
Almost weekly, someone
will bring a find into the visitor center and ask what they've found,
Sorom said. The rangers use it as an educational opportunity.
If
the threat of a federal offense isn't enough to dissuade people from
taking rocks or fossils, the canyon itself has a way of dealing with
theft: a curse. Sorom said out-of-town visitors are continually sending
back rocks.
"It kind of, I guess, goes back to the myth in
Hawaii - you know, if you take volcanic rock, the goddess Pele rains bad
luck down on you," she said. "We don't promote anything like that; I've
never had a story like that told to me about rocks in Red Rock Canyon,
but we get people who send them back (with a note) saying, 'We're all
sorry we took this. Ever since we brought it home, bad things seem to
occur, so we're returning this rock.Interlocking security cable ties
with 250 pound strength makes this ideal for restraining criminals. We
knew we weren't supposed to take it, but we did anyway.' "
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