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It would be wonderful for a variety of government agencies to be able to employ an "Aviation Archaelogist" (whether such a title is real or imagined or pending I haven't a clue) to steward over the hundreds of potentially historic crash sites in CONUS. But then what? How does one protect a historically significant site from a hiker who visits and takes a souvenir here or there... or the eco-loving visitor who still feels compelled to hike out the "garbage" from the mountainside? Or better yet, how to keep a wreck site safe from the morons who hike up to see the wrecked plane and have to put bullet holes into something or smash it up further? (This last element is the group I hate the worst - and THEY are the ones who are breeding and feeding...).
Someone mentioned earlier that wrecks are all well documented from newspaper accounts, modern digital photography, and thorough knowledge and documentation of the airplane design.
This said, is there any real use of have them protected? Who will haul a piece of metal away? I've been to several wreck sites, and have had little to no desire to touch it. There is usually very little there to protect.
With all due respect, it seems to me that the creation of such a "wreck protection czar", is sort of another waste of taxpayers money.
First, most wrecks are too far away and remote for anybody except a diehard to approach. And usually the diehard is the same guy who wants to be the archeologist.
The pilot or rebuilder 99.9% could care less, unless there is something intact and rare enough to warrant some use in a restoration project. Most wrecks are disentegrated junk.
for the remaining 0.1% of wrecks that are of some marginal value, let the restorers get a hold of them.
With that said, it simply sounds like somebody is trying to create a new job for themselves within the government. And to also extend the micromanagement of these officials. We've got enough of these running around as it is.