PDA

View Full Version : Chili Challenge Trails..............


jraya
09-14-2007, 10:15 PM
Should of went to Chili Challenge this year...........:(

N.M. fossilized tracks gain protection
Mining permit denied. Pre-dinosaur era tracks preserved
The Associated Press
Updated: 5:06 a.m. MT Sept 14, 2007
LAS CRUCES, N.M. - A federal agency's decision not to renew a mining permit for a rock quarry near Las Cruces will better protect a repository of pre-dinosaur era fossil tracks.

"Our sort of new focus is on trackways protection and trying to reclaim this mine site so the trackways are preserved," said Tim Sanders, assistant manager for the Bureau of Land Management's Las Cruces district.

The BLM decided not to renew the six-month permit held by Raul Villa because of increasing interest in protecting the 280 million-year-old trackways.

Permian-period trackways of insects, amphibians and reptiles are found in sedimentary rocks throughout the Robledo Mountains.

Sens. Jeff Bingaman and Pete Domenici have co-sponsored legislation to designate 5,367 acres in those mountains as a national monument. The boundaries of that monument did not include the rock quarry.

Villa's permit expired Aug. 24, Sanders said. That decision closed the quarry.

Elation. Disappointment.
Fossils within 50 acres of the quarry on the southern edge of the Robledos have been damaged over the years, although most of the fossils on thousands of acres in the Robledo area are undisturbed.

"They finally did it," said Jerry MacDonald, an amateur paleontologist from Las Cruces who discovered the Paleozoic-era trackways in 1987.

"What it does is it gets rid of the mixed message that was, by intent or not, being sent by the BLM, the fact that you could have the world's most important Paleozoic track sites and then have a working quarry breaking up trackway material for people's walls and floors," MacDonald said. "It just didn't make sense."

Villa, however, said he was disappointed.

The permit had allowed him to take out 2,000 tons of rock per month. Villa said the quarry employed about 10 workers and that 20 others were employed building walls around Las Cruces with the material.

The boundaries of the proposed national monument include areas popular with off-road vehicle enthusiasts, and off-road groups have fought the proposal.

Members of four-wheel-drive groups in the Las Cruces area said last year the layer in the Robledos lacks enough exposed fossils to warrant the designation, and that existing BLM protections are enough.


Supporters of the monument have said fossil tracks are being pillaged despite the BLM's protection. They also say the thousands of fossils should be more accessible for public view, which would occur if the site became a monument.

Samples from the Robledo trackways are housing at the Smithsonian Institution's Natural History Museum, the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County and the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerque.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20771729/

SavageSun4x4
09-15-2007, 09:11 AM
Dinosaur tracks. Fossils. Elephant Tusks (Ivory).

Rare? Rare? Putting Elephants in danger?

NO! NO! NO!

Tracks are found world-wide. They are common in Texas, Arizona and Montana just to name a few places.

Fossils are so common that few museums and schools will even bring them back due to LACK of storage space and the fact they are just not rare. They are truly found EVERYWHERE with little effort or knowledge.

Elephants and their ivory. Today Ivory is at the highest prices it has ever been. This is due to a "save the whales" mentality that says if we do not allow the world trade of Ivory then there will be no need for anyone to kill elephants for their ivory. So only old Ivory is allowed to be traded. Yet today more elephants are being slaughtered for their Ivory than ever before.

Recently on a raid on an illegal ivory operation they discovered over 30 tons of illegal ivory tusks. Instead of dumping the ivory on the world market and driving down prices and demand, they burned the ivory...word of this caused the underground illegal ivory market to jump in value over 25%.

Poaching has become the single largest problem that Afrikan elephants face today.

06GrnRubi
09-15-2007, 10:23 AM
Who's to say - that thousands of years from now - what's left of mankind won't look at the tracks OHV leave behind won't be looked at in the same way dinosuar tracks are looked at in our time?

Rick1975
09-15-2007, 12:41 PM
It is up to vote on the mining issue. The 2008 Chili Challenge is still going on. A lot of information at the Las Cruces' club that run the challenge.