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Metal Detecting in Mexico?

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
Anyone every do any metal detecting in Mexico? OR Should I ask if it is allowed?

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA
16 REPLIES 16

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
kmykimi wrote:
Well, I don't know whether metal detecting is allowed in Mexico. If not, why not bring your metal detectormetal detector to Africa. Hunt gold there.


WOW, Tokyo! Welcome! It is allowed!

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

kmykimi
Explorer
Explorer
Well, I don't know whether metal detecting is allowed in Mexico. If not, why not bring your metal detectormetal detector to Africa. Hunt gold there.

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
My problem is I have a gold detector not a treasure detector. Doesn't work so great doing the beach thing, higher freq which makes it more sensitive. A Fisher Gold Bug 2 for those into MD.

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

daveB110
Explorer
Explorer
Camped at Rocky Point'a Sandy Beach at Reef RV this last February, on an unusually dull morning, a group of four or five of what we took to be locals, covered the beach on about a two hour hunt. Around the main park a camper did regular-ish rounds with his detector. I have had one with me for a couple of years, but have yet to use it!

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
I will be taking mine with me this winter!

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

qtla9111
Nomad
Nomad
Here's a club in Mexico and their forum. It talks about the laws. It's in Spanish though.

Buscadores de Tesoro

You need to make sure that you don't dig up any antiquities as those are property of the Republic. There is some legislation:

B.-Sobre zonas arqueolรณgicas y ruinas, estรก vigente la Ley Federal Sobre Monumentos y Zonas Arqueolรณgicos, Artรญsticos e Histรณricos. Le anotรณ sรณlo algunos artรญculos de esa ley, mismos que son muy entendibles, y con la lectura de ellos tendrรก una mejor idea de lo que comenta de sus amigos de Yucatรกn.

ARTICULO 27.- Son propiedad de la Naciรณn, inalienables e imprescriptibles, los monumentos arqueolรณgicos muebles e inmuebles.

ARTICULO 28.- Son monumentos arqueolรณgicos los bienes muebles e inmuebles, producto de culturas anteriores al establecimiento de la hispรกnica en el territorio nacional, asรญ como los restos humanos, de la flora y de la fauna, relacionados con esas culturas.

ARTICULO 28 BIS.- Para los efectos de esta Ley y de su Reglamento, las disposiciones sobre monumentos y zonas arqueolรณgicos serรกn aplicables a los vestigios o restos fรณsiles de seres orgรกnicos que habitaron el territorio nacional en รฉpocas pretรฉritas y cuya investigaciรณn, conservaciรณn, restauraciรณn, recuperaciรณn o utilizaciรณn revistan interรฉs paleontolรณgico, circunstancia que deberรก consignarse en la respectiva declaratoria que expedirรก el Presidente de la Repรบblica.

ARTICULO 29.- Los monumentos arqueolรณgicos muebles no podrรกn ser transportados, exhibidos o reproducidos sin permiso del Instituto competente. El que encuentre bienes arqueolรณgicos deberรก dar aviso a la autoridad civil mรกs cercana. La autoridad correspondiente expedirรก la constancia oficial del aviso, o entrega en su caso, y deberรก informar al Instituto Nacional de Antropologรญa e Historia, dentro de las 24 horas siguientes, para que รฉste determine lo que corresponda.

ARTICULO 30.- Toda clase de trabajos materiales para descubrir o explorar monumentos arqueolรณgicos, รบnicamente serรกn realizados por el Instituto Nacional de Antropologรญa e Historia o por instituciones cientรญficas o de reconocida solvencia moral, previa autorizaciรณn.


ARTICULO 32.- El Instituto Nacional de Antropologรญa e Historia suspenderรก los trabajos que se ejecuten en monumentos arqueolรณgicos sin autorizaciรณn, que violen la concedida o en los que haya substracciรณn de materiales arqueolรณgicos. En su caso, procederรก a la ocupaciรณn del lugar, a la revocaciรณn de la autorizaciรณn y a la aplicaciรณn de las sanciones correspondiente.

Ahora le anoto la sanciรณn probable:


ARTICULO 47.- Al que realice trabajos materiales de exploraciรณn arqueolรณgica, por excavaciรณn, remociรณn o por cualquier otro medio, en monumentos arqueolรณgicos inmuebles, o en zonas de monumentos arqueolรณgicos, sin la autorizaciรณn del Instituto Nacional de Antropologรญa e Historia, se le impondrรก prisiรณn de uno a diez aรฑos y multa de cien a diez mil pesos.
2005 Dodge Durango Hemi
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Living and Boondocking Mexico Blog

bigdog2
Explorer
Explorer
My wife gave me one for my birthday. I plan to take it to San Felipe and the main reason I wanted one is to retrieve lost fishing lures.
LOW net worth.........HIGH quality of life
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Donna, too young to retire, she quit.


2006 GBM Pursuit 3500 DS
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silversand
Explorer
Explorer
I've seen metal detectors used all over Mexico (and Central America). As far as I can tell, metal is legal to take out of the country (or, off the find site), but archaeological artifacts (pre-Columbian pieces) aren't. If you find a galleon load of silver or gold (or, if you find gold, and you inadvertently find a ton of pre-Columbian emeralds along-side sad), on-shore, all bets are off. Then, get yourself a good team of lawyers to retain a small finder's fee.

I once stumbled across 7 large cast-iron English cannon partly buried in sand on an island in a massive brackish lagoon, on the Mosquito Coast of Honduras. I didn't need a metal detector :B I also stumbled across a long lost (how does one lose a locomotive in the middle of a jungle?) narrow-gauge locomotive roughly 3 miles from shore into one of the densest and unexplored jungles in the tropical Americas (that was interesting and bizarre, I'll tell you! This locomotive has yet to be identified; if anyone here is a professional rail historian, please PM me, and we can pick up the stalled investigation into this most unlikely locomotive locale, and it's {the locomotive's} identification).

Have fun.
Silver
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Talleyho69
Moderator
Moderator
See them on the beach here in Zihuatanejo used by both locals and North Americans.

clarlk
Explorer
Explorer
I see folks using them all the time around the Mazatlan area.. watched them on the beach lots of beer caps... Anything worth money has been hauled to the scrap yard just like the States.. shell casing would be a Bonus, More ammo sold and shot NOB..

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
gjwarneke wrote:
I have never heard thats its not allowed. My parents live in San Felipe and have a metal detector and we have used it to search for things lost on the property, I also took it to the beach a couple times. Never found anything exciting. (its and old "white's unit I beleive)
I am planning to purchase a good one in a year or so and most definatly have it with me San Felipe when I am down there for ha;lf year when retiring.
Jo


I'm buying one in March for use in the States but will take it with me South given the feedback thus far!


rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Very popular mid-peninsula searching for "pepitas" gold nuggets. The Fisher 1275-P seems especially coveted for this.


THANKS!

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

rocmoc
Explorer
Explorer
Tequila wrote:
Too many shell casings around to make it practical. LOL


That's funny. All metal prices are climbing, casings maybe a treasure, LOL!

rocmoc n AZ/Mexico
rocmoc n Great SouthWest USA

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Very popular mid-peninsula searching for "pepitas" gold nuggets. The Fisher 1275-P seems especially coveted for this.