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Date: | Mon, 13 Oct 2008 23:06:00 -0500 |
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I tend to agree, but most often books are regional and not world wide.
I can see a book written for the Red Sea or Hawaii use terms like that but
it should be with a grain of salt. Find the species elsewhere - normal
function
in verification - the other book might overlap regions and have a
different ratio.
I think sub species are the largest risk.
I have one shell that for the location where I found it, it is
considered rare.
It seems to be rare in the origin location as well.
I've read stories indicating years of rarity and then a find dumps the
high prices.
It has to be a sellers nightmare and a collector planning on cashing in
on a collection
nightmare.
Martin
Jordan Star wrote:
> Hello
> In any shell book, the words rare, common, abundant, etc., should they
> be ignored? A rare shell might be rare until a large colony is found
> or several colonies are found then it is common, right?
>
> Jordan Star
>
>
>
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--
Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
TSRA, Endowed; NRA LOH & Patron Member, Golden Eagle, Patriot's Medal.
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member.
http://lufkinced.com/
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