Booker,
This is a little out dated but it may help.
Kansas State Parks & Wildlife....use of metal detectors
Posted by: KeithWills on Jan 12, 2006 - 06:36 AM
Below you will read a message from Steve Stackhouse - Director of Law Enforcement of Kansas Parks and Wildlife. This is finally someone that understands our side of the story and is obviously intelligent, as you will read. This document is more defense for us opening our state parks here in Texas and other areas. It will be included to all those we face in the fight to open our parks. Yet the document includes even more than that; for it lays ground work for other agencies to determine what is "excavation" that would destroy plant life or natural resources in the defended use of our hobby. Keith Wills
From: Steve Stackhouse <
[email protected]>
To: carolyn
Date: Thursday, January 22, 1988 8:25 AM
Subject: Metal Detectors
Dear Ms Ware:
Thanks for you inquiry concerning the legal use of metal detectors on
public properties. The Department regulates lands in state parks and
wildlife areas. If you plan to use a metal detector on other public lands
you will need to check with the appropriate agency (primarily this would be
Corps of Engineers properties and Bureau of Reclamation properties around
federal reservoirs).
There are no department regulations directly prohibiting the use of metal
detectors on the lands we administer. There is a regulation prohibiting:
digging of holes or pits; destruction of geologic formations, historical
sites, archeological relics or ruins; and the destruction of vegetation.
This regulation would prevent someone from digging up areas, tearing up
vegetation or defacing property to locate metal objects.
A conservative approach to retrieving metal finds would be in order. It
would be impractical for me to determine if a 3" hole or 6" hole would be
legal or illegal...simply: a small hole dug to retrieve a metal object
where the vegetation wasn't destroyed and the hole was filled back in
(wouldn't be a "hole" if it was filled in, right?) would not violate the
law. To try and make a gray area clearer: Kansas has the least amount of
public land in the country, and our department is responsible for a portion
of that- the intent of our regulation is to prevent destruction of that
resource. That doesn't prohibit use of metal detectors, but requires
responsible use.
It appears that you are well versed in regulations concerning this
activity. If you have further concerns, please feel free to contact me or
the public lands manager at the particular area you are wanting to use a
metal detector.
Thanks.
Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks
Steve A. Stackhouse, Director, Law Enforcement Division
512 SE 25th Ave.
Pratt, KS 67124
Here is the link to the site that I got this from
Kansas State Parks & Wildlife....use of metal detectors
I thought it might help.
- Dave