Well Hello there fellow list members!

I'd like to step out of the shadows and share some of my experiences now that 
I'm working my way through my junior year of my space exploration degree at ASU.

Being that I completed my associates degree from a community college (which a 
very friendly and welcoming environment) and have now transferred to ASU, I 
have noticed some interesting things in the environment of a university. 
One very interesting thing I've noticed is that engineers look down their noses 
at scientists and vice versa.
 I think that is the funniest thing! It's really enjoyable to hear an engineer 
or a scientist make some jab at the other team. Apparently it's not just at ASU 
but at UofA and NAU as well so I've heard from friends attending those schools. 
That is a terrible rivalry or what ever you'd like to call it which can only 
lead to issues in collaboration between both groups.
Another interesting 'preconceived notion' I've experienced is that as far a 
meteorite go, people at the university, professors and students, see meteorite 
hunters almost like pirates, sucking up material the university is entitled to. 
I let my astrophysics class including my professor hurl all sorts of silly 
notions at me before I clarified what meteorite hunting is like. I'm sure their 
view has been skewed from shows like Meteorite Men and from some of the Saharan 
Hunters.  I explained that the Meteorite Men have special permission to hunt 
some of those fields and that they are hunting fields in which there is no 
shortage of material for universities. I explained that hunters like in the 
South Western United States spend months and months before finding new falls 
and that it is almost impossible to profit as a meteorite hunter, baring few 
exceptions. I also explained that hunting fields like Franconia or Gold Basin 
have so much material that there is more than enough for Uni
 versities to acquire. I also explained that the extreme drop in Austrailian 
finds to almost none is actually inhibiting those Universities from acquiring 
new material for research and discovery of new meteorite types.  On top of that 
I explained that a University doesn't need 30 kilos of material to study lol.
 
Meteorite hunters find a field, donate 20g's or 20% or sometimes kilos worth a 
material for classification. It's very important that this is how hunters 
process their finds along with meticulous collection habits like GPSing and 
recording each find so these unknowing educates have no ammunition when they 
come for our hunting rights. It was an eye opening experience for me to see 
that even though they can be highly experienced they aren't all as 
understanding as Laurence Garvie and the other select few educates we all work 
with.  It's scary to think they project these notions on to the students who 
flow semester after semester through their classes.

Raising awareness and educating people is how we can keep our hunting freedoms 
and how we can protect future meteorite discoveries from terrestrialization as 
a result of draconian legislations.

[Erik]

Sent from my iPod
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