.
One of the benefits for the pro-collecting lobby in the use of terms like "nighthawking" (as in "we are not nighthawks, nighthawks are not bona fide metal detectorists") is that the term is so vague. We recall explanations like the classic "I'm notta night'awk cuz I go out in the day" and so on.
Anyhow that is now changing, the Glasgow mega-project "trafficking culture" has come up with the (definitive?) definitions of nighthawking in the European (really?) context. I have already noted the fourth. Nigel Swift wrote that he found it interesting as it jives perfectly with what Heritage Action have been saying for a long while about finders' agreements etc all along. Indeed it does. Lets take a look at it. According to this new definition, among other things, a metal detectorist is guilty of nighthawking when they have:
Basically what this is saying is that anyone, whether or not they have an agreement with the farmer, who leaves the site of a bout of metal detecting without showing the farmer exactly what they are taking is a nighthawk. Obviously in the light of such a definition, to make everything clear, it would make sense for the finder to get some kind of itemised release form signed at the end of each search. That would then sort out problems about on whose land something which subsequently is sold on eBay or to a dealer was actually found, whether it was licitly obtained, or was 'nighthawked' according to the new broader definition now being proposed by the Glasgow team. Obviously a find being sold on the open market in the UK which has no release form signed by a landowner that he has seen the object and approves its removal from his land is, by the new proposed definition, potentially nighthawked. A finder wishing in any way to profit from the exhibition, lending or commercial use of such items would have to show such a form for each of them in order to prove they were not nighthawked. This new definition from Glasgow indeed makes the differentiation of licit from illicit finds in the UK (English and Welsh primarily) context much more precise.
One of the benefits for the pro-collecting lobby in the use of terms like "nighthawking" (as in "we are not nighthawks, nighthawks are not bona fide metal detectorists") is that the term is so vague. We recall explanations like the classic "I'm notta night'awk cuz I go out in the day" and so on.
Anyhow that is now changing, the Glasgow mega-project "trafficking culture" has come up with the (definitive?) definitions of nighthawking in the European (really?) context. I have already noted the fourth. Nigel Swift wrote that he found it interesting as it jives perfectly with what Heritage Action have been saying for a long while about finders' agreements etc all along. Indeed it does. Lets take a look at it. According to this new definition, among other things, a metal detectorist is guilty of nighthawking when they have:
- Searched on private land with permission from the landowner, but then failed to disclose what was found, especially items of financial value or items of Treasure, constituting theft from the landowner and/or the Crown.
Basically what this is saying is that anyone, whether or not they have an agreement with the farmer, who leaves the site of a bout of metal detecting without showing the farmer exactly what they are taking is a nighthawk. Obviously in the light of such a definition, to make everything clear, it would make sense for the finder to get some kind of itemised release form signed at the end of each search. That would then sort out problems about on whose land something which subsequently is sold on eBay or to a dealer was actually found, whether it was licitly obtained, or was 'nighthawked' according to the new broader definition now being proposed by the Glasgow team. Obviously a find being sold on the open market in the UK which has no release form signed by a landowner that he has seen the object and approves its removal from his land is, by the new proposed definition, potentially nighthawked. A finder wishing in any way to profit from the exhibition, lending or commercial use of such items would have to show such a form for each of them in order to prove they were not nighthawked. This new definition from Glasgow indeed makes the differentiation of licit from illicit finds in the UK (English and Welsh primarily) context much more precise.
1 comment:
Yes, weve been banging on about Landowners rights for some time. This fourth definition backs us to the hilt but I bet you my grandfather's old collection that it disappears.
Its not that it is wrong, the problem is that its right. Every detectorist that leaves a field without showing the stuff to the farmer (most rally attendees, for certain) is depriving him of what he owns. If a farmer isnt at a rally thats exactly what happens and if PAS are there they are witnesses!
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