"Just get out your list of humans killed by being struck by a meteorite"

Sterling, surely we need to define a new concept here - that of the "virgin meteorite" strike. Or been struck by the meteorite that's around been around the block a few times assisted by postal services.

I have a long list of humans that have lost their lives to meteorites which I also appear upon.

Now, this would make a good episode for one of the CSI's, Numb3rs, etc.; They just love finding microbes, insects and other organisms in cadavers, but for some strange reason they haven't stumbled upon a meteorite wielding perp knocking someone off with a meteorite. Think of all they could impress us with talking about densities, impacts on the body, isotope analysis and ultimately tracing provenance to some dealer using the meteorite in lieu of DNA; put him in the one-way glass room - "I cannot give up my customer list - it would put my reputation in ruin". Motives becomes intertwined, suspicious guys are crawling out of the woodwork clutching their meteorites; and finally the meteorite list comes to the rescue by tar and feathering one unexpected suspect without due process and forcing a confession after he becomes despondent because of the loss of the ability to get good deals by trading and selling to other collectors.

Back to your numbers, nice job (well, within theoretical error)! Glad to see you posts!

Kindest wishes
Doug


-----Original Message-----
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_w...@sbcglobal.net>
To: Meteorite List <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Cc: Martin Altmann <altm...@meteorite-martin.de>
Sent: Tue, Jun 28, 2011 4:08 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and meteoriterecovery)


Just to cherry-pick one question: 
Do we have any hard data on the approximate 
rate of impacts on the lunar surface? 
 
Lunar seismic data should show the larger impacts, 
but the analysis is controversial. More recent (and 
more sophisticated) analysis shows more impacts 
than we once thought. 
 
But the simple physical reality is that meteoroids 
come from far away toward the Earth-Moon System. 
The collisional cross-section is influenced by the 
gravity field of the Earth-Moon System as the 
meteoroid approaches. Geometrically, the fall 
influx of the Moon should be about 1/16th of 
the Earth's, but gravitational focusing reduces 
that to 1/18th -- the Earth hogs the meteoroids. 
 
So, on a square-mile-basis, the Moon gets 12% 
fewer meteorites than the Earth. But those figures 
are for the top of the "atmosphere." On the Moon, 
the surface IS the top of the atmosphere! 
 
On the Earth, we know (roughly) the fall rate 
BENEATH the atmosphere, but not at the top of 
the atmosphere. Well, you say, meteorites that 
don't survive are converted to dust particles in 
ablative trails, so just determine how much dust 
gets from space to the Earth's surface. Easy. 
 
Seriously complicating that simple idea is the 
large amount of meteoric dust, as opposed to 
meteoritic dust. That is, material from meteor 
streams, which is mostly dust to begin with, so 
adds only a little to the lunar impact hazard. 
(There are larger pieces in meteor streams 
and monitoring the Moon for impacts during 
periodic showers always produces a few visible 
flashes from energetic events... but only a few.) 
 
The long-term dust influx preserved in the 
Earth's ocean sediments is about 25,000 tons 
per year. The total mass of meteorites arriving at 
the surface of the Earth is likely between 2000 
and 3000 TONS per year. Or maybe 200 to 300 
tons, depending on whether you favor 90% 
ablative loss or 99% ablative loss. 
 
That figure may astound, but it's clear that less 
than 1% of all meteorites that survive to the 
surface are recovered 
 
Based on these figures for the Earth, the Moon 
would get 1300 tons of dust and particles, 140 
tons of which would be particles big enough to 
worry about. On a square-mile basis, the likelihood 
of a meteorite impact of some size bigger than dust 
is probably 8 to 12 times greater than the risk of 
being whacked on a square mile of the Earth. 
 
But the fact is that even that risk is tiny. Not just 
tiny, but tiny-tiny-tiny-tiny-tiny-tiny-tiny-tiny! 
Ten times super-tiny is still, well, TINY. Even if 
the risk were 100 times greater , it would still be 
tiny. 
 
Try an experiment. Put up a tray the size of a 
lunar hut in your yard, covered with a film that 
will exclude dust, leaves, twigs, that only a meteorite 
could puncture, and wait to collect a meteorite. 
When you do, divide the wait-time by 10 (or 100 
if you like that better), and you have the risk of 
lunar meteorite impact, the mean wait time to 
an impact (at a minimum). 
 
And, because we worry about it, every room of every 
lunar base, lab, facility, shed, hut, homestead, 
outhouse, doghouse, cathouse, and -- oh, yeah -- 
spacesuit will have a HandiPak of Sticky Patches 
within arm's reach. 
 
Just get out your list of humans killed by being 
struck by a meteorite and increase their number 
by ten. (Where'd I put that list?) And this data would 
be for a planet with a billion or billions of humans 
(increasing the odds of being hit), so reduce that 
10x number by 1000 or so. There won't be billions 
of people on the Moon for a while, trust me. 
 
It makes me want to go into the Meteorite Life 
Insurance business with a policy good for meteoric 
death on any planet. High benefit, low monthly 
premiums; just present the murderous meteorite 
to verify your claim... 
 
Sterling K. Webb 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- 
----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Gilmer" <meteoritem...@gmail.com> 
To: "Martin Altmann" <altm...@meteorite-martin.de> 
Cc: <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com> 
Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 7:29 AM 
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and meteoriterecovery) 
 
Hi Martin, 
 
I'm no expert, I only play one on the met-list. ;) 
 
But, meteoroids and micrometeoroids would arrive on a variety entry 
angles and velocities. Some at steeper angles and high speeds, others 
at shallow or oblique angles and lower speeds. ("lower" being 
relative) I agree that the more friable types of meteorite would be 
shattered or obliterated on contact with the lunar surface - probably 
into unrecognizable bits and destined to become part of the lunar 
regolith gumbo. Some robust meteorite types like irons, would 
probably survive as well. Imagine a large "crater maker" type of 
impactor, the energies involved would be enormous. There could well 
be shock and shock heating effects that would char or blacken the 
surviving shrapnel. 
 
Since the lunar surface is predominately one narrow palette of 
indigenous color, we can rule out easily detecting any meteorites at a 
glance that are of that same color range - white, light grey, medium 
grey, dark grey, But, higher contrast types should be more visible to 
the trained eye - pallasites, stony iron, iron, Martian (!?), some 
other achondrites. Or, mount a spectrometer to the exploration rover 
and look for reflectance feedback from the landscape that matches 
preset meteorite types. 
 
I don't know, it's a fanciful whimsy across a distant and bleak world, 
and it makes for good speculation. :) 
 
Best regards, 
 
MikeG 
 
PS - we can see the larger impacts on the Moon here from Earth, by 
chancing across a flash of light on the lunar surface. Do we have any 
hard data on the approximate rate of impacts on the lunar surface? 
Our Apollo astronauts were driving golf balls and tooling around in a 
rover, and did any of them witness or sense any nearby or even distant 
impacts while they were there? Just curious.... 
 
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------- 
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer) 
 
Website - http://www.galactic-stone.com 
Facebook - http://tinyurl.com/42h79my 
News Feed - http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516 
Twitter - http://twitter.com/galacticstone 
EOM - http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=1564 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------- 
 
 
On 6/28/11, Martin Altmann <altm...@meteorite-martin.de> wrote: 
Hm Michael, 
 
question - if you haven't any atmosphere, which could slow down the >
incoming 
meteorids, 
how many would survive the impact with cosmic velocities, such rocks are  typically travelling with in the inner solar system, to such a
degree, > that 
they would lie there in nice sizes usually called "stones"? 
(Hmmm and when I'll drive there around with my car, how could I spot them,  if they haven't any fusion crust or a different color from >
oxidation...) 
And if they survived the impact, how long would they survive without being  crunched, smashed, pulverized by other impacts? A little space >
weathering we 
have there, but else no weathering and no geological activities for 3 
billion years - but a permanent bombardment of small and large high >
velocity 
impacts - having hammered the complete lunar surface into a field of debris 
and dust. 
And if you look at the Apollo rocks or into your lunar meteorites, >
most of 
them witness an extraordinary violent history. Shocked, mixed, full
of > tiny 
fragments of different rocks, glasses, resolified dust...ect. 
On the other hand, iiif meteorites would survive all that on Moon, 
why then the astronauts didn't stumble every step over a meteorite,
if > they 
had 3 billion years to assemble there and no weathering, making them 
decaying? 
 
Would be my questions only (not knowledge). 
 
Martin 
 
 
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- 
Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com 
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von >
Michael 
Gilmer 
Gesendet: Dienstag, 28. Juni 2011 04:08 
An: James Beauchamp 
Cc: Edwin Thompson; meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com 
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and >
meteorite 
recovery) 
 
Sorry for all of my typos - I meant to say : 
 
Well taken, and I agree. Part of their mission was to retrieve lunar 
samples, but imagine how many meteorites could be found if a team was 
put on to the lunar surface with the primary focus of finding 
meteorites and ignoring native lunar materials. :) 
 
I'll stop posting now, I am having typing issues and developing 
blabber mouth. LOL 
 
 
On 6/27/11, Michael Gilmer <meteoritem...@gmail.com> wrote: 
Hi James, 
 
Well taken, and I agree. Part of their mission was to retrieve lunar 
samples, but how imagine meteorites could be found if a team was put 
on to the lunar surface with the primary focus of finding meteorites 
and ignoring native lunar materials. :) 
 
Maybe Acme H3 Industries, Inc, will have the spare room in their 
underground base to lease out space to a meteorite hunting team, and 
the necessary scientific equipment to use for the mission (modified 
rovers, infrastructure, etc). 
 
Heck, the mining teams might "unearth" (unlune?) buried meteorites 
from under layers of regolith. 
 
Best regards, 
 
MikeG 
 
-- 
 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- 
----- 
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer) 
 
Website - http://www.galactic-stone.com 
Facebook - http://tinyurl.com/42h79my 
News Feed - http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516 
Twitter - http://twitter.com/galacticstone 
EOM - >>
http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=1564 
 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- 
----- 
 
 
 
On 6/27/11, James Beauchamp <falco...@sbcglobal.net> wrote: 
" The Apollo astronauts were not meteorite hunters, nor did they have any 
specific mission or training involving meteorites." 
 
Mike, I don't think that's quite correct. The Apollo crews were >>>
well 
versed 
in the expected geology, and were looking for quite a diverse lot
of 
rocks. 
They spent many months training with geologists. Certainly, Dr. >>>
Schmitt 
was no exception on Apollo 17. "From Earth to the Moon" episode 10 was 
an 
excellent, even a bit romanticized focus on the geology focus. 
I think the focus was (and should have been) more anti-meteorite. We had  plenty of those. But we didn't have verified lunar samples - to >>>
include 
cores and other different types. We needed more of those to verify the  origins of our companion, and very little time and resources
on-hand >>> to 
get 
them. 
Just my thoughts on the matter. Obviously, I fully admit I should stay 
in 
my engineering corner, but couldn't help poking a little. :) 
 
 
 
 
 
--- On Mon, 6/27/11, Michael Gilmer <meteoritem...@gmail.com>
wrote: 
 
From: Michael Gilmer <meteoritem...@gmail.com> 
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and >>>
meteorite 
recovery) 
To: "Edwin Thompson" <etmeteori...@hotmail.com> 
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com 
Date: Monday, June 27, 2011, 7:43 PM 
 
Hi Edwin, Sterling, and List, 
 
I love a good science-fiction, science-fact, trip into speculation 
land. It reminds me of the old pulp sci-fi novels from the 50's and 
60's that I have read, with rocketships and moon bases. 
 
Cosmic rays are not the only threat, there are also
micro-meteorites 
and meteorites. The Late Heavy Bombardment is long over, but there is  still a lot of debris peppering the Earth and Moon on a regular >>>
basis. 
With no atmosphere, the lunar surface is basically naked to >>>
incoming 
impactors. A base facility on the lunar surface would be subject to 
high-velocity impacts on a random basis. 
 
Now we can all imagine how the lunar surface is probably littered with 
plentiful meteorites. The Apollo astronauts were not meteorite 
hunters, nor did they have any specific mission or training >>>
involving 
meteorites. The first meteorite recovery team to be stationed on the  Moon would be the very first people to hunt the surface - the >>>
opposite 
of being "hunted out". The problem is the lethal environment 
involved. It would be a death-trap full of meteorites if not >>>
handled 
properly. The Apollo astronauts could not stay out for the extended 
periods necessary to walk a grid or do a meaningful amount of 
searching for suspect rocks. Although we have made some >>>
advancements 
since then, the lunar surface is still the most hostile, alien, and 
lethal environment that an Earthly meteorite hunter could imagine. 
Our modern day meteornauts on the Moon would have to rely on radar, 
remote rovers, and man-operated rovers. 
 
To have any permanent presence on the Moon, the surface would need
warning system for incoming impactors. We can assume an >>>
early-warning 
detection system, partially automated, that consists of satellites and 
surface-based radars, telescopes, and other sensors. This warning 
system would detect potential impactors that are large enough to 
damage facilities or personnel. So, we could have a lunar rover
that 
could carry a small team of 2 individuals over a long distance with meaningful duration (say, several hours, or even "overnight" in
some 
cases.). These individuals would be dispatched to retrieve 
large/heavy meteorites that smaller unmanned rovers could not pick up. 
They could safely travel the surface (relatively speaking) and they 
could be warned to evade/avoid a potentially deadly strike by the 
warning system. They would still have to worry about the rare fluke 
micro-meteorite or one that slips through the detection system, but it 
would be slightly better odds than a crap-shoot. 
 
The bulk of the searching and retrieval would be accomplished by 
robust remote-operately rovers. These would be larger than the 
current Mars rovers we know so well (thanks for the always reliable 
updates Mr. Baalke!), but small enough to be produced on a low to 
modest budget. Essentially it would be a "wander and grab" rover with  a sophisticated optical system than can scan the lunar surface in high  resolution and provide a "first person" view to the rover operator who 
is located miles away in an underground facility. It's main 
attributes would be quickness (to cover larger amounts of real >>>
estate 
in a much shorter time span than today's rovers), keen eyes >>>
(cameras), 
and economy of travel (able to stay afield for extended periods of 
time). 
 
The rover would also have a robotic arm and a collection bin than can 
be hermetically sealed. The operator would use the rover to locate 
and retrieve all meteorites within the operating range of the
rover. 
Those meteorites which are too large, too heavy, or too numerous
for 
the rover to recover, would be assigned to a manned rover mission
to 
recover the specimens. 
 
I don't think there would be a lunar base built just to retrieve 
meteorites. However, one can envision a scientific base that is an 
all-purpose facility to house a number of teams that are based
there 
for extended periods of time and are rotated in and out. >>>
Astronomers, 
chemists, physicists, geologists....the potential uses for a lunar 
surface facility would be many and varied, and meteorites could be one 
of those missions. 
 
Instead of ANSMET, we could have MOONMET - now who is going to
apply 
for the first expedition? 
 
Best regards, 
 
MikeG 
 
-- 
 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- 
----- 
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer) 
 
Website - http://www.galactic-stone.com 
Facebook - http://tinyurl.com/42h79my 
News Feed - http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516 
Twitter - http://twitter.com/galacticstone 
EOM - >>>
http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=1564 
 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- 
----- 
 
 
 
On 6/27/11, Edwin Thompson <etmeteori...@hotmail.com> wrote: 
 
http://www.space.com/1111-private-moon-trips-forecast.html 
 
 
Dear fellow listers, for only 100 million dollars you can go to
the >>>> moon 
and 
gather your own Lunar specimens. It could be a very profitable 
enterprise. 
But the rumor mill has it that China will be going to the Moon next. If 
you 
go there be sure to dodge those nasty cosmic rays. 
 
There is a society of brainiacs that has designed a substantial Moon 
base. 
Sadly that facility must be built beneath the Lunar surface in a 
volcanic 
cavern to shield the inhabitants from cosmic ray exposure. 
 
 
Cheers, E.T. 
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