27th January 2012, 06:00 PM
I just came across http://www.treasurenet.com and its forum of treasure hunters. I tend to get a little obsessed reading forum posts, even from years back, just to see where people opinions lie. This one, I found hilarious. Back in the state, my home away from here, it hadn't occurred to me how nasty the rhetoric against archaeologists actually is among the treasure hunting "community!" People claiming we are a bunch of left wing socialists with no interest other than taking away every red blooded American's right to plunder their backyards for the ever-so-sought-after "horde" of some pirate's gold. No joke. The language is of the same type we saw from the Tea Party around the same time and it makes me wonder if many treasure hunters in the states see view treasure hunting as the same type of constitutional issue as any other issue stretched by America's far-right. Especially in this thread here: http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php/t...666.0.html where the issue is in Florida, 2008 when the state began redefining its stance on coastal treasure hunting in state waters. The response by this community is a petition to protect the rights of treasure hunters, (despite all artifacts older than 50 yrs BP being illegal to dig without permits). Then there are discussions on how to find the "enemies of archaeologists" in government to remove funding for state archaeology and grants, and thus regulation. When one considers that Odyssey exploration brings so much media attention to this issue it scares me to think the public might be more likely to get behind TH than proper archaeology because of the amateur opportunism it offers. Of course, this is the basic divide between professional archaeology and treasure hunting.
One major reoccurring point I found quite interesting is the argument that THs should be allowed to continue as "amateur archaeologists" on the grounds that it is impossible for professional archaeologists to dig up every parcel of land in America (or anywhere) anyway, so they could do the work for us. I know I am preaching to the choir here, but it is very clear by reading such statements in the TH community how much of a public disconnect there is between what they think we do and what we actually do. Clearly it is not realized that the point is to not dig up every artifact on Earth, and of course their own bias roots from a direct get-rich-quick profit motive. I mean, there's engineers on there attempting to make homemade GPR carts to avoid the rental fees and enable limitless historical record exploitation.
This is a pretty pointless rudimentary rant against treasure hunters. But I've got no other outlet to vent
p.s. I'm sick of the phrase "treasure hunting"
One major reoccurring point I found quite interesting is the argument that THs should be allowed to continue as "amateur archaeologists" on the grounds that it is impossible for professional archaeologists to dig up every parcel of land in America (or anywhere) anyway, so they could do the work for us. I know I am preaching to the choir here, but it is very clear by reading such statements in the TH community how much of a public disconnect there is between what they think we do and what we actually do. Clearly it is not realized that the point is to not dig up every artifact on Earth, and of course their own bias roots from a direct get-rich-quick profit motive. I mean, there's engineers on there attempting to make homemade GPR carts to avoid the rental fees and enable limitless historical record exploitation.
This is a pretty pointless rudimentary rant against treasure hunters. But I've got no other outlet to vent
p.s. I'm sick of the phrase "treasure hunting"