Having worked for 25 years at fragile archaeological sites in Peru, UCLA archaeologist Charles ‘Chip’ Stanish held his breath when the online auction house eBay launched more than a decade ago. ‘My greatest fear was that the Internet would democratize antiquities trafficking, which previously had been a wealthy person’s vice, and lead to widespread looting,’ said the UCLA professor of anthropology, who directs the UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology. Indeed, eBay has drastically altered the transporting and selling of illegal artifacts, Stanish writes in an article in the May/June issue of Archaeology, but not in the way he and other archaeologists had feared. By improving access to a worldwide market, eBay has inadvertently created a vast market for copies of antiquities, diverting whole villages from looting to producing fake artifacts, Stanish writes. The proliferation of these copies also has added new risks to buying objects billed as artifacts, which in turn has worked to depress the market for these items, further reducing incentives to loot. ‘For most of us, the Web has forever distorted the antiquities trafficking market in a positive way,’ Stanish said. Looting, which is illegal, is widely recognized as destructive to cultural […]

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