Hi Marc and list,
I think your right with the
Radar pin pointing the field of fall I think there is no need to hold back
cords of finds. We all know that they are there and for the most part we all
know that if you find one the finder will search the whole surrounding area so
what's the point. And Marc great work on your radar data you for sure have a
new customer.
Bryan Couch Wildomar Ca
Dare to fail
On Sep 7, 2012, at 8:12 AM, Marc Fries <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Greetings all
>
> I've been talking with a few people about logging the Battle Mountain
> meteorites, and I'd like to start some discussion on the topic of find
> coordinates. This is NOT directed at any one person, but I would like to
> editorialize a bit. I'm getting a lot of push-back about printing find
> coordinates and I'd like to open the topic to general discussion.
>
> Historically, the locations of found meteorites have been a closely
> guarded secret. That made a lot of sense when meteorite hunting relied most
> heavily on eyewitness reports. A hunter could easily put in many, many miles
> of walking before coming across a meteorite. For finds that are made with
> weather radar, however, I don't think its the same situation. When I post
> radar analyses, it is like posting a treasure map that says, "Go Here". At
> that point everyone knows where the meteorites are, and it seems to me that
> the locations of individual stones aren't nearly as important as they were in
> the past. (Strewn fields without detailed radar data are another matter, of
> course.) Where those locations do matter are to A) the science behind
> describing the meteorite fall, and B) the value of the individual meteorite
> since a well-documented meteorite should be worth more than a random stone
> from a given fall.
>
> I am a scientist, and my first instinct is to collect, analyze, and
> -share- data. I understand where that is at odds with the level of secrecy
> needed in the past, but I think that that level of secrecy is no longer
> needed and actually works contrary to the value of meteorites, both monetary
> and scientific. On the Galactic Analytics website, I'm willing to go against
> my better instincts and hide find locations, at least until a scientific
> paper is released describing the fall. But to be honest, I think that's a
> little silly - I'll basically have a table showing meteorites with the find
> locations redacted, and then you can scroll down the page a bit and see a map
> showing where the meteorites are.
>
> So let me throw this out there as a general question - is it really
> important to hide the find locations?
>
> Cheers,
> Marc Fries
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