[meteorite-list] Duck Chondrule
From: Rob McCafferty <rob_mccafferty_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Oct 6 19:41:55 2006 Message-ID: <20061006234153.21688.qmail_at_web50909.mail.yahoo.com> --- drtanuki <drtanuki_at_yahoo.com> wrote: > Ken and List, > The dangerous thing I see happening is > foreign buyers buying the stuff in Thailand and > elsewhere and taking it back to their countries to > sell. Yes, I have seen several foreign buyers > buying > it in Thailand. Best, Dirk...Tokyo > This started out with me thinking, "Ha, this is like seeing the virgin Mary in a slice of toast, isn't the human mind wonderful?" and ended up with me thinking, "Cripes. I need to be more cynical" Many say I'm too cynical already but I'm in this less than a year and am only just recognising real from junk. Poor quality photos don't help. (OK, I know a chondrite should have a greater chondrule density than this with hindsight but it's been a long, hard week) It really is a concern. I'm trying to get kids excited by meteorites. Idiots like this are making it difficult. The lesson is, buy only from whom you can trust, I suppose. I don't like monopolies or cartels which are possible if the diabolical situation of uncrupulous fakers continues. Fortunately, with starting prices of 99c on ebay, it still seems like a free market economy. I don't mind paying "over the odds" for something I really want from someone I trust. Especially when it seems that "over the odds" is simply more than anyone else was willing to pay in a free auction. I've bought some lunar stuff at more than I wanted to pay on Buy It Now because I REALLY wanted to compare it to Apollo stuff (you know who you are) and this is a pride of my collection because of my perception of the material, not what I paid for it or anything else. I also bought a lunar sample which I would have gladly paid twice as much for (I'd i'd had the money) but nobody else seemed to want from someone (and you know who you are, too. Probably felt I robbed you. Maybe every other collector was broke that week). Its a bless the free market economy time again. My biggest concern (I'm sure I've said this before) is that one of my students comes to me with a lump of pumice or similar and says "I bought this meteorite off ebay". If I have to tell them its not a meteorite because the "5 billionaires" or similar have conned them. How am I going to feel, having got them interested? Nail them up, I say! Nail some sense into them! I know the sellers names of the guys I trust but I don't want to be advertising them but what else could I do? (OK, I tell them anyone with an IMCA no. is OK) In difficulty Rob McC __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com Received on Fri 06 Oct 2006 07:41:53 PM PDT |
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