Stealing relics, or parts of, is wrong. As was mentioned in the article, "The damage he did cannot be undone," Zeman said. "I've said this before, but any time you have an incident like this, it's like tearing a page out of a history book. This is a cultural resource and it can't be replaced. This piece of history is gone and no one will again be able to view that piece in its original state again."
In a similar, but slightly different circumstance, is the destruction of history by development, whether in the U.S. or any other country. In some cases, history prevails, such as in WalMart giving up on its plan to put a store in the Battle of the Wilderness area, but in other cases, it fails. Here in Korea, where I've lived for the past twenty-two years (first came here twenty-seven years ago), I have been working to have some historic land surveyed. It is where the US forces traveled up Ganghwa Island (west of Seoul) in 1871--the first US military action in Korea. The line of march the US took is now quickly falling to the backhoe and bulldozer; if one looks at a GoogleEarth satellite image in 2003 and now, the destruction is horrendous. I have made it my personal mission to collect and record as much physical evidence as I can before it's all gone (I estimate no more than about five years). Surveyors' markers are all over the place, so it's only a matter of time.
I painstakingly record everything I find, including taking GPS readings and pictures (showing a scale and directional marker). I just finished writing an academic research journal article on my quest to pinpoint the line of march; it will, hopefully, come out this fall. Among the items I've recovered are 12-pdr. shell fragments, spherical case fragments, canister shot, canister plate fragment, .45 cal. matchlock musket balls (Korean), .50-45 Remington rolling block brass (and even a couple .50-45 misfires), .50 cal. and .58 cal. bullets. They all add to the historic record, but would otherwise have been scooped up by excavating equipment. I hope my article leads to a full-scale land survey of the area.
Attached are a few of the items I've located.