[meteorite-list] NWA's, "Dealers", Science, & NomCom

From: MexicoDoug_at_aol.com <MexicoDoug_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed Nov 24 15:57:28 2004
Message-ID: <4DD0027B.546D6D80.0BFED528_at_aol.com>

Hello John, Larry, Mike, Michael, List,

I want to respond to John's point of view on Mike's dramatic suggestion that we acquire NWA's only from "the dealer" that classified it.

Mike - good post. My only wincing is that "the dealer" doesn't classify it. A Met Soc approved researcher does mi cuate. I know you know that but it won't hurt to remind you, I think, with my respects, as always to you for a bang-up job. I am in agreement with the spirit of your post and with that of John's with has me thinking you are both way too right, extreme and impractical. What you have done IMHO is make a perfect combined argument to get all the dealers off their alleged lazy and greedy duffs to do the right thing.

John - Your post was good as usual, but more jaded than I am accustomed to coming from you. This "Trust" argument alternative holds no water personally since folks like me and I assume like Larry are not interested in doing credit and background checks on dealers. And without folks like me and I assume like Larry all you dealers will be soon stuck in a pyramid scheme with each other on Meteorite pricing which everyone's free-for-all neglect of scientific protocol has created and sales have happily fomented.

So Listen, please and stop blaming the "nomads gangs" (wow that was a laugher) or Habibi or Hupe or whoever and distancing yourselves - this is a collective problem, period.

John, other than the "trust" monopoly exclusive club smelling thing you suggest, I think you have not added your usual eye-opening value to Mike's post. The answer [I think] here is to add the stone and fragment numbers to conserve the classification process. Like NWA 6000, 2, 4 {...}. And keep a copy of the original classification card. In this hypothetical exaple case, the NWA 6000 stone #2 slice 4. I stole the idea from Dr. Grossman and NASA curators. It works. Then if you cut the slice in half and give your partner the second half, she has NWA 6000,2,4,2. Don't make this confusing. sheesh, it is just adding a number and only when necessary to your little piece of heaven, not cataloging the entire stone.

Larry, let me give you the reason I think no one has done this. It isn't some far flung idea - there is a great scientific precedent now and for years. My opinion is that "meteorite dealers" just don't want to deal with the paperwork. What a PATHETIC excuse of theirs. They know enough to know who they bought the piece from and how much they sold it to you for. And the tax authority probably requires it anyway, too, but let's let the tax authority police them on that. The other half is that they don't want you to know where they got it from. Another pathetic excuse to sacrifice the science you buy for their blindly greedy benefits.

The elementary school library has the Dewey Decimal system, what a great model, and first graders can handle it, but not us. Ho Hum. I bet a German cat could handle it. It is the same no-brainer thing.

So no one is asking from John for his new esquisite Sahara iron these numbers, and he won't send them to you (or will he:)). So let's not just blame the "dealers", but take our ownership as well. No more "I don't know what to do, it's a meteorite jungle out there." Just a courteous question to the dealer. "Can you tell me the fragment number I am buying?" If they squeal on that one you know you are dealing with a pig. If they are honest you're not buying a pig in a poke.

"Dealers", well now that I'm in boiling water, how is this: We are not interested in your name or your competitors original card. It should just be the MetSoc approved researcher's card. OK scientists, taxonomists, Jeff and committe members. Here is your chance to shine...can you suggest a simple card filled out by the researcher when classifying all specimens of a #?. No dealers need apply. How handsome my collection of 50 meteoritic scraps (and one nice witnessed Mexican fall) would then be. How enchanted I would be looking over my real collection!!! Not that I am not now, but we need to do better and find the way to make all benefit. Not shoot down one good idea after another. John, Mike thanks for the platform and good ideas that had me do this one.

Saludos, Doug

After spending the night with Comet Machholz and a spotlight Moon last night I may be tired so I may be a little crusty today. Don't mind.

En un mensaje con fecha 11/24/2004 12:56:32 PM Mexico Standard Time, birdsell_at_email.arizona.edu escribe:

Hi Larry, Mike and list. Yes, at first this sounds like good advice, however this can lead to numerous problems as well. For instance I obtained a beautiful large chunk of NWA 482 in a trade with you Mike, and I know that numerous other dealers also have NWA 482 for sale. If we were only to purchase from the dealer who had the meteorite classified then this would pretty much eliminate such trades as all such traded
pieces would become worthless. Another example is Dhofar 019. There must be 20 dealers all legitimacy selling this shergottite, which they themselves purchased wholesale. Now if everyone were only to buy from the individual that had Dhofar 019 classified (Serge), then Serge would be stuck with around a kilo of Martian rock with no market for it except for the retail market. He would be relegated to selling off 200 mg here and 300 mg there for the next forty years. This would make the acquisition of large, rare rocks retarded unless someone wanted to spend 40 years recouping their initial investment. The same can be said for hundreds of other meteorites. This also screws the collector who may
want to sell one of his expensive meteorites to buy something else. If everyone only purchases from the person that originally had the meteorite classified then the resale value of these meteorites would be zero. I don't think that the collectors are going to appreciate paying top dollar for some expensive planetary meteorite and then being told that "Oh yeah, by the way don't try to sell that expensive meteorite
that we just sold you because you are not the one that had it classified and no one will buy it from you." This would really piss me off if I were the collector that had spent my hard earned money on an expensive and rare meteorite specimen. The best thing for dealers to do is to get their meteorites classified by a legitimate research institution, and to
use their own numbers. If they want, they can say "my NWA XXX is probably paired to NWA YYY" or "my NWA is paired to NWA ZZZ" depending upon the provisional or final classification respectively. For those buyers that want to be sure they are getting properly classified and named specimens, they should keep track of which dealers do follow the Nom. Com. guidelines and avoid those that do not. Fortunately the overwhelming majority of dealers are honest and play by the rules.
Unfortunately, there is a lot of BS being put on the meteorite-list by certain meteorite dealers of the "my meteorite is better than yours" sort. Don't be fooled by this non-sense either-it is just a transparent attempt at self promotion. There are a lot of very reputable meteorite dealers out there that do not engage in these types of sales tactics,
and I would prefer to support these honest, reputable dealers.

Cheers


-John
Arizona Skies Meteorites
http://www.arizonaskiesmeteorites.com







Michael Farmer wrote:

> Larry, this is the problem I was getting at.
> I will tell you the simple solution, buy the meteorite from the dealer
> who had it classified, then there can be no error.
> Mike Farmer
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Larry Harrison"
> <L_Harrison_at_infostations.com>
> To: <meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2004 9:54 AM
> Subject: [meteorite-list] NWA's
>
>
>> Greetings List,
>>
>> I am but a small time collector (>200 specimens). However, I cherish
>> my small example of the evolution of the solar system. I am also an
>> astronomy educator. I always include meteorites in my lectors AND I
>> am always asked "how do you know if it is really a meteorite? My
>> answer: Irons are simple to recognize, and I explain the
>> widmanstatten figure and how it forms. Stones on the other hand
>> require analysis especially when chondrules (I explain chondrules)
>> are not easily visible. In those cases it is very important to know
>> your source. I have always made it clear that I only deal with
>> reputable dealers.
>>
>> The posts of late have put a very large question in my mind about who
>> is reputable. The saddest part is that many reputable dealers are
>> being scamed by the Nomads. I prefer to collect the rarest of the
>> rare. And this is where most of the scams are being made. My
>> absolute certainty of the authenticity of my collection is now in
>> question! I do not question that any piece in my collection is or
>> isn't a meteorite, but that it is not the specimen type that I think
>> it is. I have always been more than excited about the immense number
>> of new and rare meteorites coming out of the Sahara. If not for these
>> finds I could never afford as many representations of the early solar
>> system or of the achondrites of lessor differentiated bodies. I am
>> crushed, uncertain and totally confused! What to do? Since I am not a
>> big time buyer, my reluctance to purchase further NWA's will not hurt
>> any of you. However, I feel that I am Mr. Average. If this mess curbs
>> my desire to purchase more meteorites, I assure you it is doing the
>> same to many more. This is the saddest moment in my 20 years of
>> meteorite collecting.
>>
>> Thanks for letting me vent,
>>
>> Harrison
>>
Received on Wed 24 Nov 2004 03:57:11 PM PST


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