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nigelswift wrote:
Yes, the Treasure Items would be fun to track down (but mostly they're described as from an "old" collection or not British so I doubt if you'd earn any bonuses for getting people's collars felt. Laundering by description is a piece of cake.)
Roger Bland reported some success 'negotiating' with the seller/buyer when they spot things. Also if they give the nod to Ebay, they will pull the item. Ah well, it's a start anyway.

nigelswift wrote:
... as you'd also notice the 600 British non-treasure antiquities, often museum quality and mostly unreported, on offer perfectly legally EVERY day.
Do you have a link to see what's on offer on e(vil)Bay please Nigel? Just for research (and training) purposes. I'm not going to auction my small ?flint tool? honest.

[Please use proper quotes Nigel. We know you can :-).]

[Please use proper quotes Nigel. We know you can :-).]

No. Genuine curmudgeons don't. Its how we recognise imposters within our ranks ;)

Not sure what you mean about an ebay link. Just searching in their search box for "flint scraper" or whatever pulls them all up.
The PAS database is good as well, though not desperately easy to navigate I find.