Publication Date:
2018
Description:
〈p〉The fossil trade of Paleozoic material from southern Morocco was estimated by some North American media to reach about US$ 40 million a year, and it supplies fossil shows and shops all over the world. In its initial stages of extraction, preparation and export, this trade constitutes the main source of income to more than 50 000 people in an area basically conscribed within the triangle made by Alnif–Erfoud–Taouz (eastern Anti-Atlas), and generated a true ‘fossil industry’. This includes diggers and miners, artisans that prepare and restore fossils (and others dedicated to making replicas with decorative purposes), quarries working on fossiliferous ornamental rocks, and numerous middlemen and Moroccan wholesalers who annually attend the large fossil fairs of Europe and the USA. More than 25 years of intensive exploitation of fossil resources in the Anti-Atlas has also produced important scientific discoveries, such as world-renowned fossil biotas like Fezouata and Tafilalt, and hundreds of new Paleozoic fossil taxa, in parallel with a worrying destruction of outcrops and many palaeontological sites. The new mining legislation also deals with the extraction, collection and trade of geological specimens, and a future specific legal framework for fossils and geological heritage will try to manage the existing industry. It will aim to restrain the constant deterioration of the rich Moroccan geological heritage, while enabling strategies of sustainable development so that the local population is not negatively affected.〈/p〉
Print ISSN:
0375-6440
Electronic ISSN:
2041-4927
Topics:
Geosciences
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