Aloha Michael,

I will try to answer your question. Here are my reasons for keeping specimens 
up on a webpage after they have been sold:

1. The webpage documents a particular meteorite that I have 
acquired/analyzed/classified, along with its subsequent cuttings or components 
that were offered to the collecting/science communities. Marking a specimen as 
sold and keeping it on the webpage serves as a record for all of the pieces I 
have sold. I have had numerous inquiries from clients who had questions or 
issues with their purchased pieces and without the images and information 
documented on the webpage, it would be difficult or impossible to recreate.

2. Although I am not an active hunter like Michael Farmer, I do have a day job 
in addition to running a business. I don't have time to update all of my 
webpages, as I typically sell 60-100 meteorites a week. I also acquire new 
meteorites on a semi-regular basis and must create new pages for them.

3. The webpage documents market value or pricing for a particular specimen. It 
is interesting to see how prices have remained fairly stable despite the steady 
rise in pricing over the years. By not keeping the sold items and their 
associated prices on the webpage, there is no public record of these specimens 
(of course I have business records).

4. Showing the sold items along with the available ones gives the website 
peruser the ability to gauge the popularity of a meteorite. Visiting a website 
over a period of 24 hours after a specimen has been offered can show a great 
deal of activity in sales. And many meteorites I have offered have sold out 
within 24 hours.

5. I do not compare meteorites with clothes. I do not buy clothes in the same 
manner as I buy meteorites, and do not expect others to do so either. I don't 
care whether a particular size or color of a garment is available or not. I do 
care if a particular inclusion or chondrule is present in one slice or another. 
A prospective buyer would not be able to do this if I took down a specimen 
immediately after selling it.

6. Provenance. Maintaining a webpage with its sold items is a documentation of 
specimen provenance. Of course each item sold comes with a Certificate of 
Authenticity (CoA) from my business, but the images on the webpage are 
invaluable for authenticating a particular slice or piece in addition to, or 
absence of said CoA.

7. For Mike at Satwatch.org, all specimens offered are available or marked SOLD 
on the same page. It is not an inconvenience to the prospective buyer because 
he is not redirected to another page. I am not going to create another archive 
page because that is more work, and would be more confusing to navigate than 
the system I currently use. 

I hope I have explained appropriately and clearly, the reasons for maintaining 
sold specimens alongside available ones on my webpages. I have done so not to 
make your lives more complicated, but to offer documentation of all meteorites 
sold that I have had analyzed and classified. Some dealers don't do that, but 
rather than think I that I am making it more difficult for buyers, I like to 
think that I am offering more value added information and provenance to buyers 
and prospective buyers.

gary

On Mar 5, 2013, at 6:41 AM, Michael Mulgrew <[email protected]> wrote:

> Mike,
> 
> I asked the same question in spring of 2011, please refer to that
> thread for some discussion:
> http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com/2011/apr/0507.html
> 
> -Michael in so. Cal.
> 
> On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 8:33 AM, SatWatch.org <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Dear Sellers on the list,
>> 
>> I have been looking to purchase a number of different meteorites, so I
>> have been going to the webpage links under some of your seller messages.
>> What I find on some pages are a bunch of items that appear to still be for
>> sale, but when I go to the meteorite linked page, it says SOLD.
>> I ask... if you have it listed on one page for sale, then when you go to
>> the item page it is sold, and you have posted it that way... why keep it on
>> there?
>> It makes it more difficult to shop around, and I will probably not shop on
>> that site any further. I see something that appears to be for sale, and I
>> think I might want it... only to find out it sold, over and over on that
>> site.
>> 
>> Okay, I know you are proud of your past finds and sales, but think of the
>> shopper.... Maybe you should put together an archive section of items
>> sold....
>> 
>> Just a thought...
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> Mike
>> 
>> Sent from my iPad
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Gary Fujihara
Big Kahuna Meteorites 
PO Box 4175, Hilo, HI  96720
(808) 640-9161
http://bigkahuna-meteorites.com/
http://www.ebay.com/sch/fujmon/m.html

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