Hi Richard, Great post, and points... I agree that the numbers won't work when actually 'classifying' meteorites, or even using a university lab to visually examine a suspect/possible meteorite. The small "fee" would be insignificant and not economically practical I understand for a university lab. Besides that, there is a process already in place for classification. This I would hazard a guess is why ASU is stopping their meteorite ID program. It's just not cost effective and it bogs down the real classification work. I was not referring to a university lab being used in the "identification" process though.

There is a clear distinction between identification and classification in the meteorite world. Classifying a meteorite is a completely different story than IDing a piece of magnetite. This is a two edged sword I know.

My point is this. It's worth the small "fee" for a private sector business to "weed" through the 1000 meteorwrong submissions to get to the 1 that has a better chance of being a meteorite. This in turn frees up the time of the university lab scientist to do actual classification work. His/her time is now spent on "pre-qualified" leads/submissions instead of non-meteorites and it becomes much more efficient. Prequalifying suspect meteorites through this process would work to alleviate the abuse, and would weed out those false meteorites at the same time.

The numbers I ran are simple. Most meteorite people I know make between $25/hr-$50/hr in their day jobs. It might be worth a $25-$50 fee for meteorite experts to field the meteorwrong submissions, to get to that .1% that are meteorites before submitting them to a lab. Visually examining a suspect stone takes less than 1 hour of time to get a reasonable and accurate idea whether a stone is a meteorite or hunk of basalt.

I would put forth there are many meteorite experts here on list and within the meteorite world that can identify a suspect meteorite with a very high degree of accuracy. Most are very experienced in spotting/examining the obvious magnetite, basalt, and river rocks that are constantly submitted by finders.

At the very least it would shrink the pool of wrongs, and increase the percentage of meteorites submitted to the labs for classification.

Eric




On 9/8/2010 1:37 PM, Richard Kowalski wrote:
Eric,

I'm not sure if you've "run the numbers" on what such a service would cost, but 
lets talk a few numbers, that I admit are essentially pulled out of thin air.

Salary for a full time researcher, with no benefits, $35000 per year (and 
that's on the low side)
Lab, minimum cost of $1000 per month, just for the space, with no equipment.
Lab costs, minimum of $100 per hour.
Lab equipment, I won't even make a guess at this, but minimum, would be many 
10s of thousands of dollars for a properly equipped lab.


So, say the researcher can spend 5 full hours each day actually examining&  
studying the specimens. The rest of the day is spent doing other related tasks. 
That means 25 hours per week or 1250 hours per year (only two weeks vacation per 
year)

Using the three numbers I cite $35,000 + $12,000 + 125,000 means that at a 
minimum a facility would need to charge at least $137.60 per hour just to break 
even on these costs. Of course many institutions charge overhead of as much as 
50% so now that hourly cost is double.

If you provide the researcher with any benefits at all and you have to equip 
the lab with even a high quality polarizing microscope, your hourly costs go up 
in proportion to how much equipment is in the lab and how rapidly those costs 
can be depreciated. Need another employee that deals with administration? Well 
your hourly fees have to go up again.

Agreed that if you offer a service that at has a minimum fee of $300 just to open the 
package and let you know you have a meteor-wrong, most of these submissions will vanish. 
However, how many people would be willing to spend the $300 base fee to be told by an 
expert, in effect "certify" the rock they know is a meteorite in fact a 
meteorite? How many of those would then pay the many hundred or thousands of dollars more 
for this commercial company to classify the meteorite? Few to none I suspect.

As I said I'm pulling these numbers out of thin air, but I'd guess that those 
of you getting meteorites classified, if you are paying under several hundred 
dollars per hour in fees to get it done, are getting an incredible bargain. 
This is often because the costs are passed on to the taxpayer that funds your 
institution of choice.

I doubt any of the meteoriticists doing this at an institution have figured out 
a per hour or per classification cost, but my guess is that my estimate is well 
below actual costs.

--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography
IMCA #1081


--- On Wed, 9/8/10, Meteorites USA<[email protected]>  wrote:

From: Meteorites USA<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] ASU suspends public meteorite identification 
program
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, September 8, 2010, 11:40 AM
I would think a "paid" meteorite
identification service might alleviate some of the burden of
abuse. This would have a screening effect on those that
would normally be adamant that their Earth rock is a
meteorite even in the presence of evidence it's not. People
that won't take no for an answer probably wouldn't spend money to have it examined professionally in the first
place. Supplement your time with a small fee. This will weed
out those in denial.

Eric


On 9/8/2010 11:26 AM, Adam Hupe wrote:
Yes, it was just a matter of time.  You can only
tie up your resources looking
at so many meteorite wrongs before it interferes with
budget and time
management.  I no longer look at
solicited/suspected meteorites from unknown
parties for the same reasons. Most think their finds
are going to make them the
latest millionaires and do not want to hear the
truth.  Dreams are free unless
you are the one characterizing the object. Some get
very angry when you tell
them what they have is not a meteorite and they are
not that easy to find
regardless of what they saw on TV or read on some
website. You can only be
abused so many times before the process becomes less
enjoyable.

Here is to finding real meteorites!

Adam
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