
Is it legal to collect fossils on public land?
Fossil collecting on public land is controlled by the agency that manages the land and by the type of fossil involved. In the United States, casual collecting of some common invertebrate and plant fossils may be allowed in certain places, while vertebrate fossils and many protected park units are strictly off limits without a permit. The correct working rule is that land status comes first. You should know whether you are on National Park Service land, BLM land, state park land, tribal land, or private property before you touch the specimen.
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