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tramadol online overnight shipping With regards to cultural issues, I’m perhaps using ‘culture’ in an overly broad and incorrect sense, but certainly Mongolian dinosaurs are part of Mongolian history and British dinosaurs part of British history and it should be no surprise that people find a special interest in things from their own countries and have a special attachment to them. Selling those off, legally or not, diminishes the collective heritage of the country in question. The Chinese have a special attachment to the giant panda which is only currently alive in the wild in China, but while of course these animals do move abroad in zoos etc., no one questions that the Chinese can’t feel proud and attached to them, and can’t protect the animals individually and the species as a whole both for themselves and the world. In short, the point is that I think there is, or can be, a strong connection between people and the fossils of their nation and that’s no more or less valid than connections to Neolithic art, wildlife or even geology.