[meteorite-list] How much will your meteorites be worth in the FUTURE?

From: Count Deiro <countdeiro_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2013 01:05:09 -0800 (GMT-08:00)
Message-ID: <13688125.1362906309312.JavaMail.root_at_wamui-junio.atl.sa.earthlink.net>

Hey Steve!

Man, there must be a helluva rip in the ozone layer along the entry path of that Chelyabinsk fall in the Urals. It's been a couple of weeks, so what do you think we..uh, rather they... should be watching out for?

I don't know what your smoking, but I'd like to get some. Contact me off List.

Guido

-----Original Message-----
>From: Steve Dunklee <steve.dunklee at yahoo.com>
>Sent: Mar 9, 2013 11:58 PM
>To: Shawn Alan <photophlow at yahoo.com>, hall at meteorhall.com
>Cc: Meteorite Central <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] How much will your meteorites be worth in the FUTURE?
>
>I believe the site forgot to mention the primary value of astroids will be as material we do not have to launch into space. The metals and anything with water will have a great value for use in space construction, but the achondrites that lack metal with have little value in space construction. The cost of bringing anything back to earth from space will preserve metorite prices, with the possible exception of achondrites ans lunars. Bringing samples back from mars would in most cases increase the price as we would have to build a facility to launch vehicals from mars which is why most reasonable proposed mars missions are a one way trip with no return. A space elevator would would lower costs some but the biggest Problem of sending stuff into space is the large hole it makes in the ozone layer every time we send up a rocket. Launches of the shuttle over the US in the 1980s caused disruptions in the weather which included a rare tornado in december in
> michigan. and most Hurricanes have been exactly two weeks after a major launch of a rocket over the area of the hurricane.
>Cheers
>Steve Dunklee
>
>--- On Sun, 3/10/13, hall at meteorhall.com <hall at meteorhall.com> wrote:
>
>> From: hall at meteorhall.com <hall at meteorhall.com>
>> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] How much will your meteorites be worth in the FUTURE?
>> To: "Shawn Alan" <photophlow at yahoo.com>
>> Cc: "Meteorite Central" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>> Date: Sunday, March 10, 2013, 6:53 AM
>> Looking into the crystal pallasite
>> ball, in the year 2025, I see
>> achondrite fragments at $1.00 per gram! However, they will
>> lack the
>> beautiful fusion crust of our meteorites. Besides, due to
>> the UN Universal
>> Museum Convention of 2035, all of our meteorites will be
>> confiscated as
>> historical and/or cultural artifacts...JUST KIDDING! Just
>> fooling. That
>> doesn't happen until 2075. :-)
>> Fred
>>
>>
>> Hello Listers
>> >
>> > Ever wonder how much an asteroid would yield in profit,
>> gold, platinum,
>> > o2, hydrogen? Well a website called http://www.asterank.com/ has done
>> > that.
>> >
>> > There are over 600,000 asteroids and counting that are
>> listed on the
>> > website, where one can categorize in value, profit, or
>> accessibility.
>> >
>> > Germania is value at $100 trillion with estimated value
>> return to be
>> > around $97 trillion. However, Germania is located 3.3
>> AU, so the distance
>> >
>> > can be a factor, but once technology improves,
>> asteroids will have endless
>> > supplies of natural resources. Lastly,
>> >
>> > There has been talks that by 2014, there will be
>> asteroid hunting space
>> > crafts in orbit.
>> >
>> >
>> > Now in 20 to 30 year, will meteors coming into Earths
>> atmosphere and
>> > impacting with the Earth be the thing of the past?
>> >
>> > What will that do to meteorite collecting and will
>> prices increase or
>> > decrease because the average joe can go to the
>> >
>> > local Walmart and pick up a rock kit with over 5 pounds
>> of rock from
>> > space? Or will it make the meteorite a rare
>> >
>> > commodified object, more or less a reminder of what
>> once was a common
>> > occurrence but now is story left told in
>> >
>> > the history books, and meteorites will be view a relics
>> and controlled?
>> > artifact? Only time will tell :)
>> >
>> > But til then, check out http://www.asterank.com/? and plan your next
>> > expedition to an asteroid :)
>> >
>> >
>> > Shawn Alan
>> > IMCA 1633
>> > ebay store
>> > http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
>> > http://meteoritefalls.com/???????????
>> > ______________________________________________
>> >
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>> >
>>
>>
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Received on Sun 10 Mar 2013 05:05:09 AM PDT


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