$25/gr. ...I find for $12/gr. similar material, for
not speack in Munich the best pieces shows have ask 15
euro for gram or under.
Matteo
--- Stefan Brandes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha scritto:
> I´m not sure this meteorite realy exists ;)
>
>
http://cgi.ebay.com/Millbbilliiee-3-gram-individual_W0Q
Have any of the list members heard of Planet X and all of the predicted comets comming in with it? Could that possable be our future? I think NOT! But if a disaster happened from a large impact, we would all be under marshal law and there would be no economy! Actualy no food either for that mat
Would anyone have a map or a link to a meteorite strwenfield in arizona? thanks.justin
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From: michael cottingham [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 13, 2006 8:32 PM
To: 'michael cottingham'
Subject: AD: AUCTIONS ENDING, Including a Rare piece of Rangala From India!
Hello,
Once again there are great auctions ending soon.
Chec
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html
SPIRIT UPDATE: Spirit's 'Arm' Busy Checking New Targets - sol 1013-1016,
November 13, 2006:
After Spirit's successful 0.71-meter (28-inch) bump on sol 1010, the
team has new targets in the robotic arm's work volume for the first time
in 204 sols
If I'd sneak around in the Johnson Space Center,
from time to time opening my trench coat, throatily whispering in the ear of
the startled visitor: lokilookilooky Moon! Loookilooky 99,5% off from
NASA price,
isn't that then already a junk shop price?
Lkilookilooky 4483, Loookilooky 4485, L
--- Martin Altmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> If I feed the inflation calculator with the widely
> reported costs of 65,000$
> per gram for the Apollo-material,
> I get out a little less than 300,000$/g today.
> So lunaites compared to chondrites have to be
> articles for junk shops...
>
Hi all,
This weekend Sonny and I were once again out in the
field hunting for meteorites.
Sonny, along with his Son, and their friend Steve
Smith scoured a California dry lake bed and came up
with some nice finds.
My Son (Ruben Jr.) and I also hunted a dry lake bed
but ours was
Willcox Playa i
Dear Listees,
I have some eBay auctions ending soon, here are some examples:
NWA 1774 Meteorite - R3.8-6 - Thin Slice - 4.242g
http://cgi.ebay.com/NWA-1774-Meteorite-R3-8-6-Thin-
Slice-4-242g_W0QQitemZ140050595658QQihZ004QQcategoryZ3239QQcmdZViewItem
NWA 1777 Meteorite - EUCRITE Poly
MARS GLOBAL SURVEYOR
Image of the Week
November 13, 2006
The following new image taken by the Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) on
the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft is now available:
o Mars at LS 137 Degrees (Released 07 November 2006)
http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/2006/11/13
Image Caption:
I´m not sure this meteorite realy exists ;)
http://cgi.ebay.com/Millbbilliiee-3-gram-individual_W0QQitemZ290049902155
If I have recognized it correctly the ID card is from Mike Farmer and should
spell it the right way.
But I know, it´s difficult to read it, to spell it and to type it correct
Yeah, that's true, but think of the market for 'broken glass in souvenir
boxes'! lol
Yes I can see the ebay title now - "Ebay #134355 Ultimate hammerstone,
destroyed an entire city NR! "
There would probably be a whole new series of new minerals too, molten
house glass mixed with vaporized
Hi Mark,
as far as sample return missions are concerned, we are still at a price per
gram for ordinary chondrites of 320 000 000$ - if the Hayabusa probe would
have been successful.
Gravity is quite an economically awful drag, friction too.
(I hope the US-government won't have the idea to declare
On the subject of large catastrophic impacts, it would be interesting to
see what would happen in such a case, of course anything big enough to
vaporize a city probably wouldn't have any/much cosmic material left, so
any small fragments might actually be quite valuable!
i dont know... consi
Hi Rob,
That 'tis indeed a 'peachy utopia of a vision'! Though ironically it's the
scientists that are sending the robots to 'Farm' the Antarctic for pristine
space rocks, the collectors are the ones roaming the war zones and dry horrible
deserts of the world looking for the weathered brown ch
Hi Rob,
at least there is hope for those, who bought rare early pre-NWA-desert, that
their collections will gain value again after the devaluation of the last 5
years.
(Names and falls all in all never were afflicted).
Eeeeh, and Rob, those among the scientists still having the opinion you
menti
I have this wonderful vision of the future.
The supply has dwindled to nothing and our collections
are worth small fortunes. The scientists are getting
bored of calling us looters, bandits, thieves and
bounty hunters as it means they won't be getting any
new stuff by insulting us
.and then i
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