[meteorite-list] NASA could sell...
From: Martin Altmann <altmann_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2011 09:59:02 +0200 Message-ID: <002701cc34a0$17829fb0$4687df10$_at_de> To sell the Apollo rocks? Have you taken leave of your senses?!? Those rocks, which the heroes of my youth brought back, risking their lives, and in the greatest technical adventure of all times?? You're all watching too much TV! Too much science fiction! We can't go around in the solar system in that way you're taking a cab! Manned spaceflight is extremely difficult and extremely dangerous. Look what we can do. At the moment we have an assemblage of tin cans in such a low orbit, a kind of water ski in spaceflight, in a so low orbit, that the grandmas call the police, whenever the ISS cross over their heads! And more we cannot! Now we are all trembling, that the little box called "Dawn" will not fail and send us some data from the front garden of our tiny solar system. Lunar materials, think to the millions of man-hours spent in the deserts, to assemble the tiny pile of lunar meteorites, so small and light-weighted, that everyone of us can lift it without difficulties. (And think about that, whenever your nose starts to wrinkle, when such a specimen offered is lousy 100 bucks more expensive per gram than you expected.) And although I feel still quite healthy, I won't live to see a man or woman on Moon again (not to mention Mars). Really. Rather sell the Brooklyn Bridge. And which meteorites shall NASA sell? Those from ANSMET? That isn't possible because the Antarctic Treaty prevents that, and hey - we're all buyers and sellers of meteorites, so we definitely know, that the revenues would be out of absolutely all proportion to the expenses paid to collect these meteorites. And thus, it would be even probably elements of offence, a misappropriation. Huh, we're just selling a brachinite, the freshest available, where in 36 years of Antarctic searches by all countries together not more than 3 different were found, together half a pound. And we are selling that one in slices and not in bulk - and at a total, wherefore you can pay having an ANSMET-Team exactly one single day on the ice! These are the relations. It is absolutely necessary, that the ANSMET meteorites stay in the courtesy of governmental institutes and universities - their acquisition was expensive enough! (No offense, in my eyes these costs are fully justified). To sell them on the market would bring in peanuts compared to that, what the taxpayer had spent for them. And Richard, who says, that NASA wouldn't buy meteorites? Nasa consists of hundreds of departments - of course if you address to the janitor, he won't buy a meteorite. But those exploring the solar system do, of course. And the abnormal opinion of people, pretending to be scientists interested in meteorites, that a Moon or a chondrite is per se a crime, that you found at best in countries with an underdeveloped meteorite research like e.g. Australia or Oman, but certainly not in USA. ;-) Martin Received on Mon 27 Jun 2011 03:59:02 AM PDT |
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