Credit where credit is due
Editor's Note: This news story about David Wasion was originally published in The Citizen Scientist on 29 October 2004. It is being published again because David Wasion has written two articles for this issue about his momentous discovery.
Amateur scientists who report significant
findings to professional scientists often receive recognition
in the form of acknowledgements in scientific papers. Sometimes
they even co-author the papers. However sometimes they are
all but ignored.
Consider a news article in the journal Science
about a major archaeological discovery in Wisconsin (Terrence
Falk, "Wisconsin dig seeks to confirm pre-Clovis Americans,"
vol. 305, 30 July 2004, p. 590). This article describes one
of the most important North American archaeological finds
in recent history. Wooly mammoth bones dated to 13,500 radiocarbon
years before present suggest that Clovis hunters were in North
America some 2,000 years before their earliest assumed arrival.
The article in Science describes
a major dig at the site where the mammoth bones were uncovered
years ago. Key scientists are named and quoted, but the amateur
scientist who first identified the evidence for human interaction
with some of the bones is not.
According to the article, the excitement
in Wisconsin dates back to 1990, when "an amateur archaeologist
found butcher marks on mammoth bones stored at a local historical
museum."
But the "amateur archaeologist"
is not named! Nor is the original discoverer of the bones
named.
A Google
search eventually led to www.woollymammoth.org/
and the identity of the unnamed amateur scientist. According
to this source, he is avocational archaeologist Dave Waison,
who in 1990 served as a volunteer worker at the Kenosha Public
Museum of Kenosha, Wisconsin.
When Waison was helping out at Kenosha Historical
Society Museum, the museum showed him mammoth bones that had
been found nearby more than half a century earlier. Waison
immediately recognized marks on the bones as the same kind
of markings left by manmade tools. This discovery led to the
current dig nearby.
The article at www.woollymammoth.org/
named amateur archaeologist Phil Sander as having drawn a
detailed map of the area now being excavated. He drew the
map in 1964 after mammoth bones were accidentally uncovered
on a farm, but he is not named in the Science article.
Do amateur and citizen scientists deserve
credit where credit is due? Send you comments to "Backscatter"
(type "Mammoth" in the subject line). You can let
the editors of Science know what you think about
failing to credit amateur scientists by sending e-mails to
Science here.
Diplomatically written letters that include the citation of
the article in question (see above) stand a better chance
of publication. 
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