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Space The Almighty Buck Earth United Kingdom News Science Technology

Christie's Set To Auction Space Rocks For Out Of This World Prices (networkworld.com) 49

coondoggie quotes a report from Networkworld: It's not everyday you could have the opportunity to buy a piece of space -- but Christie's London auction house will on April 20 offer about 80 meteorite pieces and a bunch of space-rock paraphernalia to go along with them. The collection -- consisting of a variety of space rocks from private and public collections -- is expected to sell for over a million dollars at the auction. The Valera Meteorite may be the most famous rock in the collection as it is purported to have killed a cow.
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Christie's Set To Auction Space Rocks For Out Of This World Prices

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  • and behold Valera the Meteorite who once killed a cow...step right up.
    • A cow? Boring. Show us one that killed a human.

      • No... a god!

        • by duckintheface ( 710137 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @07:34AM (#51859199)

          The value (as with most things) lies not in the rocks but in the attitude of the buyers. The rocks are deemed as special because they came from another place and have a documented history (killed a cow). But that is the perception of a buyer with a very Earth-centric view. In fact, Earth is a big rock in space and every clod on it's surface is a "space rock".

          Once we become a space-faring civilization, this rarity value attached to non-Earth rocks will seem very quaint. Since almost all the matter in the universe is "non-Earth", it will be Earth rocks that will have the value of the rare.

          • Once we become a space-faring civilization, this rarity value attached to non-Earth rocks will seem very quaint.

            What a strange way of thinking of it ... so we have a Venn diagram, and then it's Earth and non-Earth. That's a little too simplistic.

            In your scenario, we'll have Earth, Mars, Venus, Alpha Centauri, Vulcan, Ceti Alpha V, and what have you. But they'll all be boring because they're "not Earth".

            They may not be universally valuable, but like people collect souvenirs, they'll have some sentimental a

    • Please click the Network World link because of course meteors and computer networks are practically the same thing.

      Is this how desperate content sites have become?

      TWEET!
    • by RogueyWon ( 735973 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @07:46AM (#51859237) Journal

      I hadn't realised that "killing a cow" was such a value-booster. I spy a business opportunity here.

      Buy up items which could conceivably be used to kill a cow: shovels, pickaxes, trampolines (that one needs a bit of creativity) and so on. Use them to kill cows, then re-sell at a profit.

      What could possibly go wrong?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 07, 2016 @04:59AM (#51858875)

    I have a space rock for sale. It's a lot larger than the average they have on auction, so bid accordingly.

    Specs:

    - mean radius: 6,371.0 km (3,958.8 mi)
    - mass: 5.97237x10^24 kg (1.31668x10^25 lb)
    - mean density: 5.514 g/cm^3 (0.1992 lb/cu in)

    It orbits somewhere around the star called Sol. Buyer collects.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Frankly, for that kind of cash I'll purport to have killed a cow too.

    • by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @06:19AM (#51859017)
      I had a quick look at the catalogue and it's all famous meteorites. Non-famous ones are available for very little (heck, I have about a dozen of them sitting on a shelf). It's sort of like the difference between hiring George Clooney vs. Shlomo Gefiltashlep to do a bar mitzvah.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        For a bar mitzvah you need to butcher a cow, not seduce it. The meteorite wins hands-down over George Clooney here.

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @05:45AM (#51858959)
    I'll sell you two for a tenth of what they're looking for. That's right, a $2,000,000 value FOR ONLY $100,000!!!
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Earthmen routinely pay $5000US per gram for some of them.
  • Buy cheap meteorite, find cow, kill cow with meteorite (tricky but doable), you now have a $2M meteorite.
    Who said the cow had to be killed by the fall.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Oh, I can't resist:

      Meteorites are for cows ... You are all cows. Cows say moo. MOOOO! MOOOO! Moo cows MOOOO! Cow say... OUCH!

  • is going for how much?

  • The Australian outback is full of space rocks, and given the rise of automated solar powered vehicles it is only a matter of time before somebody figures out how to harvest them on a huge scale for very little cost. http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2016... [gizmodo.com.au]

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