6533b7dbfe1ef96bd1270c85

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Managing palaeontological heritage: a brief overview of policy and practice in England

Jonathan. G. LarwoodColin D. Prosser

subject

PluckingHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectCultural heritage managementCuriosityPaleontologyEnvironmental ethicsLegislationQE701-760Natural (archaeology)media_common

description

Fossil collecting for scientific and educational reasons, as well as to support natural curiosity, has taken place in England since at least the late eighteenth century. It was not, however, until the late nineteenth, and particularly the mid-twentieth century, that site-based conservation of palaeontological heritage, and the management of collecting, was established. This paper provides a brief overview of the development of the policy and practice of palaeontological heritage management in England. It includes an outline of the establishment of national legislation, and a summary of the practical approaches to managing palaeontological sites and the collection of fossils that have been adopted. A number of examples are used to illustrate the application of this approach in different circumstances, including the coastal and quarrying environments.

10.7203/sjp.34.1.15250https://ojs.uv.es/index.php/sjpalaeontology/article/view/15250