4.3 Article

Are Fossils Mineral or Cultural Heritage? The Perspective of Brazilian Legislation

期刊

GEOHERITAGE
卷 14, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12371-022-00719-3

关键词

Fossils; Legislation; Brazil heritage

资金

  1. Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation for Research Support of the State of Rio de Janeiro (Faperj, Brazil) [E-26/200.828/2021]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq, Brazil) [311962/2018-1, 303596/2016-3]
  3. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel-Brazil (CAPES) [001]

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Fossils in Brazil are considered a heritage of the union and can be seen as mineral heritage or cultural heritage depending on their relation to human culture. There is a lack of clear criteria for differentiating rare specimens from common occurrences, highlighting the need for new norms to preserve Brazilian fossil heritage. A new legal framework for mineral extraction is crucial to ensure better preservation and provide legal certainty for professionals and mining companies.
Fossils have great potential for elucidating and popularizing geosciences among all age groups. Brazil, due to its continental dimension and wide geodiversity, has many internationally important fossiliferous sites, which include rocks from the Pre-Cambrian to the Quaternary eras. Thus, in this study, we analyse the legislation and public policies related to the extraction, use, or protection of fossils and palaeontological sites in Brazil. This research examines the legal and infra-legal normative documents and numerous publications on the subject. Our results show that fossils are considered a heritage of the union, i.e. mineral heritage according to the mining code or, exceptionally, cultural heritage when they are related to human culture. Although the sale of fossils as a main product of mineral extraction is not regulated, it is possible and legal to sell material extracted from rocks formed basically by fossils. Hence, it is common to observe the use of such fossiliferous rocks as landfill, construction and paving materials, agricultural inputs, or other types of industrialized products. Mining and civil works, by exposing layers of fresh or slightly weathered rocks and expanding available observation areas, contribute to the advancement of palaeontological knowledge. Accordingly, we evaluate the absence of clear criteria for differentiating whether a fossil is a rare specimen or a common occurrence, entailing the necessity for the proposal of new norms for the preservation of Brazilian fossil heritage. Our study demonstrates that a new legal framework concerning the extraction of mineral resources is crucial to ensure a better preservation of Brazilian fossil heritage and to provide legal certainty for both professionals who research these natural assets and mining companies or those who develop construction projects in sedimentary basins.

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