This article explains why museums should avoid acquiring fossils which lack sufficient provenance and where the circumstances are suspicious. It argues that, regardless of whether one considers fossils to be cultural property or not, the Museums Association's Code of Ethics should be followed not only in order to maintain public trust in museums but also to ensure compliance with current laws
Human remains are a unique type of archaeological artifact because of the emotional and cultural tie...
There are many ways to protect cultural heritage as a valuable commodity. Although heightened securi...
The focus of this article is upon objects in museum collections where legal title is uncertain ("orp...
Paleontological museums should adopt a code of ethics in order to carry out restorations and to set-...
Paleontological resources require similar protections to archaeological resources because the threat...
Many museum educational programs and exhibitions worldwide, designed to communicate to the public th...
Provenance, the ownership history of an artifact or work of art, has become one of the primary mecha...
Fossils are important scientific and educational resources. In recent years, fossils have become pop...
The world's archaeological heritage is under serious threat from illegal and destructive excavations...
This Article highlights the issues surrounding the international movement of cultural property by ex...
This book is an essential resource for geoscientists, park and geopark managers, tourism and regiona...
Abstract: There are a myriad of laws, guidelines and unwritten agreements relating to human, hominid...
With the advent of ancient DNA, as well as other methods such as isotope analysis, destructive sampl...
Forty years have passed since the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing ...
Do you know what a kiwi looks like - all the way down to the orientation of the nostrils? While smal...
Human remains are a unique type of archaeological artifact because of the emotional and cultural tie...
There are many ways to protect cultural heritage as a valuable commodity. Although heightened securi...
The focus of this article is upon objects in museum collections where legal title is uncertain ("orp...
Paleontological museums should adopt a code of ethics in order to carry out restorations and to set-...
Paleontological resources require similar protections to archaeological resources because the threat...
Many museum educational programs and exhibitions worldwide, designed to communicate to the public th...
Provenance, the ownership history of an artifact or work of art, has become one of the primary mecha...
Fossils are important scientific and educational resources. In recent years, fossils have become pop...
The world's archaeological heritage is under serious threat from illegal and destructive excavations...
This Article highlights the issues surrounding the international movement of cultural property by ex...
This book is an essential resource for geoscientists, park and geopark managers, tourism and regiona...
Abstract: There are a myriad of laws, guidelines and unwritten agreements relating to human, hominid...
With the advent of ancient DNA, as well as other methods such as isotope analysis, destructive sampl...
Forty years have passed since the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing ...
Do you know what a kiwi looks like - all the way down to the orientation of the nostrils? While smal...
Human remains are a unique type of archaeological artifact because of the emotional and cultural tie...
There are many ways to protect cultural heritage as a valuable commodity. Although heightened securi...
The focus of this article is upon objects in museum collections where legal title is uncertain ("orp...