[meteorite-list] Just how Willamette is it?
From: Darren Garrison <cynapse_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 15:42:03 -0400 Message-ID: <tbp9i3ldcqhgp0ao0khp31bjn9gp13elar_at_4ax.com> Don't settle for partial Willametteness! http://www.inthenews.co.uk/news/autocodes/countries/united-states-america/meteorite-auction-underway-$1157767.htm Meteorite auction underway Sunday, 28 Oct 2007 18:25 Some of the universe's most expensive rocks are going under the hammer in the United States today. Bonhams and Butterfields of New York are hosting the auction of out-of-this-world objects, some of which are expected to sell for millions of dollars. Among the items on offer at the Historic Meteorites and Associated Americana sale is a 1,400lb Brenham meteorite with naturally occurring gemstones, the Claxton Mailbox meteorite whose "special delivery" made quite a dent and other specimens from the Moon and Mars. Bonhams' Ed Beardsley said: "It is a great privilege to host the first auction ever devoted to meteorites, and we could not be more thrilled given the spectacular offerings included in this sale." The top attraction, however, is the missing section of the extremely Willamette meteorite which sits ? without its missing section ? in the American Museum of Natural History. This 30lb section has an estimated value of up to $1.3 million (?0.63 million). Slivers of the rock have sold at auction before at prices exceeding five times the value of their equivalent weight in gold. Bovine fans with lesser spending power may be interested in a chunk of the only known fatal meteorite, which killed a Venezuelan cow. This is valued at as little as $3,000 (?1,461). "This could well be the first and last of such sales?you just can't top this," Darryl Pitt of the Macovich Collection commented. Received on Sun 28 Oct 2007 03:42:03 PM PDT |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |