Greg,

I agree with Peter and Mike and Darren and Greg Hupe, and Shauna, and Martin, and of course Jack especially... certainly, and most profoundly hope this is a joke. This has absolutely nothing to do with price and everything to do with hard work. You seem to think that information as valuable as that should be shared ad hoc with every person who asks for it. It's not... And shouldn't be, at least not right away. Preserving the strewnfield and recording all available data is priority. The value to science of this fall is absolutely important. Though I can sympathize with your frustration, you'll understand once you get out in the field that it's not about keeping secrets or withholding information out of spite or some other conspiratorial reason. It's simply about the time it takes to properly recover the specimens and collect data that is then shared with universities and announced publicly.

Those hunters and scientists in the field work countless hours pouring over eye witness reports, news articles, making phone calls, investigating, interviewing, analyzing video, maps, trajectories, speed, angles, photos, weather and many other things aspects I can't mention. Not to mention wandering around the Arizona desert in July in 100+ degree heat where the normal person wouldn't go.

Get out there! Pound the ground! Do the research. Do your homework. Spend your money. Search and recover. Hunt! Walk around in the Arizona desert for 10 days straight with only a couple finds to your name. Sleep in hotels, and camp out on the ground. Trudge through brush and tall grass, rocks, and uneven terrain. Walk tens of mile a day through rattlesnake and scorpion infested desert for days on end. Then see if you want to release the coordinates to anyone who asks you for them. I guarantee you won't! Someone, anyone must earn the right to the information whether they like it or not...

It's about science and work. Get out there and do it. Research, hunt, then recover your own meteorites.

I guarantee it will be that much more rewarding if you do.

Good luck!

Regards,
Eric





Greg Catterton wrote:
I would like to go join the hunt for meteorites at the recent fall, but it 
seems this is being kept a secret location... Is this to drive the prices up?

One would think extra sets of eyes and hands would be great, but in my opinion it seems a select group is the only ones who will be "allowed" hunting the field then they will in turn charge $100 per gram, yet again for something that is worth far less. Not cool at all. I know I will not be buying from any of you hunting ever again who dont want to allow someone to tag along for the first hunt they would do. If this is the way you "big time" hunters want to conduct yourselves, it shows just what your intentions are. Money.
Greg C.
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--
Regards,
Eric Wichman
Meteorites USA
http://www.meteoritesusa.com
904-236-5394

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