Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-15 Thread Tom Randall (KB2SMS)


   Hi folks,
  This is why I keep good records on each piece in my  
collection. The who, what,when and wheres. The size, weight, etc.

My pieces all came from the famous folks know by this list.

It's part of the fun of collecting!

Regards!

Tom



---
http://home.roadrunner.com/~kb2sms/

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Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Stuart McDaniel

Hey Mike, I got this rock.











(JK)







LOL!!








Stuart McDaniel
Lawndale, NC
Secr.,
Cleve. Co. Astronomical Society
- Original Message - 
From: "Galactic Stone & Ironworks" 

To: "al mitt" 
Cc: "Meteorite List" 
Sent: Saturday, August 14, 2010 8:19 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy 
unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers




Hi Al and List,

I didn't mean to come across as pissy in my original post.  But it
does irritate me a bit when people won't do basic homework.

For example, if a person finds a possible rare Elvis collectible at a
garage sale, that person should not immediately go to an Elvis mailing
list or message board and start pestering people to identify it,
appraise it, and buy it.  The correct course of action would be to go
home, get on the internet and do some research.  Look for similar
items, check the sales history of such items, check for signs that the
item is a fake, etc.  Once that is done, if questions remain, then go
out and contact an "expert" or ask for help.

I'm not one of those RTFM people.  I understand that newbies need help
with the complexities of the meteorite market and the science of
meteoritics.  But I am seeing a laziness here where people have
something that is *obviously* not a meteorite and a 2-minute Google
search would reveal that fact.  Sure, they have no way of knowing at
first, but one trip to Dr. Korotev's Gallery of Meteorwrongs would put
the question to rest in 99% of cases.  And how does one find a site
like Dr. Korotev's?  Simple, ask Google.  A simple search query of
"meteorite identification" will yield a wealth of useful information
including photos and tests that can be conducted by any layman.  If
people would do that, they would save themselves a bunch of time,
trouble and dashed hopes - and they would save the rest of us some
time also.

I have one person who has emailed me repeatedly over a course of
months - telling me the same story over and over again.   He sends me
the same photo attachments, again and again.  And I have politely told
him that his specimen is likely not a meteorite and I pointed him to
Dr. Korotev's website and a few other sources of information.  I also
told him, that if he wants to be 100% certain, he should take it to a
university and have either a geologist or a qualified person to look
at it.  Instead, he will go away for a few days, send the same emails
to a dozen other dealers, and then finally come back to me with the
same story again.   I wonder how many times his story has ended up in
our inboxes and how many times that members of this list have taken
the time to be helpful and explain things to him.  It's almost like
this person has some kind of "brain block" and they cannot process any
information that says their specimen may not be a meteorite.  I
finally had to block the person's email address, but he keeps sending
emails about the same specimen to other dealers.

The internet has been a mixed blessing for doing research.  It's very
easy to go online and receive a schooling on any subject in the world.
And, unfortunately, it's easier to go online and ask somebody else to
do your research for you.  I'm not expecting newbies to identify their
own specimens, but I do expect people to do the most basic and
fundamental homework before they start bombarding dealers and
collectors with repetitious emails that amount to spam.

And then there are the ones who get downright ANGRY if you try to help
them out.  Some people are convinced they have a meteorite and if you
tell them otherwise, then you are suddenly trying to rip them off and
steal their valuable meteorite - even if there is no offer to buy it.
I've had people tell me to go have sexual congress with myself because
I dared to say that their moqui marble is not a meteorite.

I like to be helpful and I enjoy helping eager newbies get started in
the hobby.  All I ask is that people do a little homework first, and
not expect other people to do all of the work for you.  Afterall,
there is no better reading than meteorite articles, books and papers.
Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read about meteorites??!  I
can spend all day reading abstracts and articles about meteorites - of
course, that makes me a total nerd.  LOL

Meteorite Men has been a mixed blessing.  It has brought a new wave of
people into the hobby and many of them are good people.  But it has
also brought out the loonies and scammers - like the guy who mailed
his toliet plunger to Adam Hupe and insisted that it was a CM2 just
like Sonny's.  That was after the same guy emailed me and a dozen
other dealers about his toliet plunger.  And when Adam told him the
object was not a meteorite, the guy went off the deep end.  This is
another reason why I closely guard my telephone number.  LOL...

Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Galactic Stone & Ironworks
Hi Barry,

Thanks for the kind words.  I try to be a nice guy, but some people
definitely would argue that point.   If you go back through the
archives, you will see that I have stuck my foot into my considerable
mouth many times and I pissed off some people in the process.  I'm not
proud of it, but I have tried to learn from it.  Like anything else,
it's impossible to please everyone under the best of circumstances,
and I have rubbed a few people the wrong way.  That is why I posted a
follow-up clarification to my initial posting - to avoid pissing off
more people with my "wisdom". ;)

You are good guy Barry, and anyone who has dealt with you will attest
to the fact that you have been genuinely bitten by the meteorite bug
and you are developing a real passion for it.  Nurture that passion
and you will do just fine in meteorites.  When I first started out, I
didn't know a chondrite from a bowling ball.  My friendly advice would
be to read everything about meteorites that you can get your hands on.
 Start out with Rocks from Space by the late-great O. Richard Norton.
Then move on to the Encyclopedia of Meteorites.  Lastly, read Cosmic
Debris by Burke.  Rocks from Space will give you the basics.  The
Encyclopedia will expand those basics and give you some great photos.
And Cosmic Debris will give you a solid background in the history of
meteorites, meteoritics, and the famous names in the field.  Also,
join the Meteoritical Society and get a subscription to the MAPS
journal.  The MAPS journal is absolutely indispensable for getting a
deeper education on meteoritics.  Also, get a subscription to
Meteorite Magazine and read the online Meteorite Times every month.
If you do these things, you will develop a good working knowledge of
meteorites.  You have already joined this list, which is a good thing
- when the list behaves itself.  LOL

Of course, there are a bunch of other good meteorite books, including
the definitive works by Nininger.  If you can afford them, track down
Nininger's works.  And if you can afford the $250 hit, get a copy of
Grady's Catalogue of Meteorites.

And lest I forget, read Kevin Kichinka's "The Art of Collecting
Meteorites" - it provides a great window into the world of collecting.

And stay away from those Chinese eBay "siderolites". ;)

Best regards,

MikeG


Mike Gilmer - Galactic Stone & Ironworks Meteorites
http://www.galactic-stone.com
http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone




On 8/14/10, Barry Hughes  wrote:
> You're just a nice guy Mike...If you were a shithead, nobody would
> bother you..;)
> Thanks for helping me when you have...I read through your rant hoping
> I wouldn't find references to myself...:)
> Being a new guy is a bitch, too.  First of all, your dumber than hell
> no matter how respected you are at what you've done all you life..and
> secondly..you have to learn a volume of terms like co, c3, l4, l5,
> carbonaceous, rubble pile, inclusion, breccia...etc...when the only
> thing you new before was to put the ite after meteor if it hit the
> ground...
> It's Saturday..enjoy ..I really hope the best...
>
> On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 8:19 PM, Galactic Stone & Ironworks
>  wrote:
>> Hi Al and List,
>>
>> I didn't mean to come across as pissy in my original post.  But it
>> does irritate me a bit when people won't do basic homework.
>>
>> For example, if a person finds a possible rare Elvis collectible at a
>> garage sale, that person should not immediately go to an Elvis mailing
>> list or message board and start pestering people to identify it,
>> appraise it, and buy it.  The correct course of action would be to go
>> home, get on the internet and do some research.  Look for similar
>> items, check the sales history of such items, check for signs that the
>> item is a fake, etc.  Once that is done, if questions remain, then go
>> out and contact an "expert" or ask for help.
>>
>> I'm not one of those RTFM people.  I understand that newbies need help
>> with the complexities of the meteorite market and the science of
>> meteoritics.  But I am seeing a laziness here where people have
>> something that is *obviously* not a meteorite and a 2-minute Google
>> search would reveal that fact.  Sure, they have no way of knowing at
>> first, but one trip to Dr. Korotev's Gallery of Meteorwrongs would put
>> the question to rest in 99% of cases.  And how does one find a site
>> like Dr. Korotev's?  Simple, ask Google.  A simple search query of
>> "meteorite identification" will yield a wealth of useful information
>> including photos and tests that can be conducted by any layman.  If
>> people would do that, they would save themselves a bunch of time,
>> trouble and dashed hopes - and they would save the rest of us some
>> time also.
>>
>> I have one person who has emailed me repeatedly over a course of
>> months - telling me the same story over and over 

Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Barry Hughes
You're just a nice guy Mike...If you were a shithead, nobody would
bother you..;)
Thanks for helping me when you have...I read through your rant hoping
I wouldn't find references to myself...:)
Being a new guy is a bitch, too.  First of all, your dumber than hell
no matter how respected you are at what you've done all you life..and
secondly..you have to learn a volume of terms like co, c3, l4, l5,
carbonaceous, rubble pile, inclusion, breccia...etc...when the only
thing you new before was to put the ite after meteor if it hit the
ground...
It's Saturday..enjoy ..I really hope the best...

On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 8:19 PM, Galactic Stone & Ironworks
 wrote:
> Hi Al and List,
>
> I didn't mean to come across as pissy in my original post.  But it
> does irritate me a bit when people won't do basic homework.
>
> For example, if a person finds a possible rare Elvis collectible at a
> garage sale, that person should not immediately go to an Elvis mailing
> list or message board and start pestering people to identify it,
> appraise it, and buy it.  The correct course of action would be to go
> home, get on the internet and do some research.  Look for similar
> items, check the sales history of such items, check for signs that the
> item is a fake, etc.  Once that is done, if questions remain, then go
> out and contact an "expert" or ask for help.
>
> I'm not one of those RTFM people.  I understand that newbies need help
> with the complexities of the meteorite market and the science of
> meteoritics.  But I am seeing a laziness here where people have
> something that is *obviously* not a meteorite and a 2-minute Google
> search would reveal that fact.  Sure, they have no way of knowing at
> first, but one trip to Dr. Korotev's Gallery of Meteorwrongs would put
> the question to rest in 99% of cases.  And how does one find a site
> like Dr. Korotev's?  Simple, ask Google.  A simple search query of
> "meteorite identification" will yield a wealth of useful information
> including photos and tests that can be conducted by any layman.  If
> people would do that, they would save themselves a bunch of time,
> trouble and dashed hopes - and they would save the rest of us some
> time also.
>
> I have one person who has emailed me repeatedly over a course of
> months - telling me the same story over and over again.   He sends me
> the same photo attachments, again and again.  And I have politely told
> him that his specimen is likely not a meteorite and I pointed him to
> Dr. Korotev's website and a few other sources of information.  I also
> told him, that if he wants to be 100% certain, he should take it to a
> university and have either a geologist or a qualified person to look
> at it.  Instead, he will go away for a few days, send the same emails
> to a dozen other dealers, and then finally come back to me with the
> same story again.   I wonder how many times his story has ended up in
> our inboxes and how many times that members of this list have taken
> the time to be helpful and explain things to him.  It's almost like
> this person has some kind of "brain block" and they cannot process any
> information that says their specimen may not be a meteorite.  I
> finally had to block the person's email address, but he keeps sending
> emails about the same specimen to other dealers.
>
> The internet has been a mixed blessing for doing research.  It's very
> easy to go online and receive a schooling on any subject in the world.
>  And, unfortunately, it's easier to go online and ask somebody else to
> do your research for you.  I'm not expecting newbies to identify their
> own specimens, but I do expect people to do the most basic and
> fundamental homework before they start bombarding dealers and
> collectors with repetitious emails that amount to spam.
>
> And then there are the ones who get downright ANGRY if you try to help
> them out.  Some people are convinced they have a meteorite and if you
> tell them otherwise, then you are suddenly trying to rip them off and
> steal their valuable meteorite - even if there is no offer to buy it.
> I've had people tell me to go have sexual congress with myself because
> I dared to say that their moqui marble is not a meteorite.
>
> I like to be helpful and I enjoy helping eager newbies get started in
> the hobby.  All I ask is that people do a little homework first, and
> not expect other people to do all of the work for you.  Afterall,
> there is no better reading than meteorite articles, books and papers.
> Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read about meteorites??!  I
> can spend all day reading abstracts and articles about meteorites - of
> course, that makes me a total nerd.  LOL
>
> Meteorite Men has been a mixed blessing.  It has brought a new wave of
> people into the hobby and many of them are good people.  But it has
> also brought out the loonies and scammers - like the guy who mailed
> his toliet plunger to Adam Hupe and insisted that it was a CM2 just
> like S

Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Barry Hughes
You're just a nice guy Mike...If you were a shithead, nobody would
bother you..;)
Thanks for helping me when you have...I read through your rant hoping
I wouldn't find references to myself...:)
Being a new guy is a bitch, too.  First of all, your dumber than hell
no matter how respected you are at what you've done all you life..and
secondly..you have to learn a volume of terms like co, c3, l4, l5,
carbonaceous, rubble pile, inclusion, breccia...etc...when the only
thing you new before was to put the ite after meteor if it hit the
ground...
It's Saturday..enjoy ..I really hope the best...
Barry


On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 8:19 PM, Galactic Stone & Ironworks
 wrote:
> Hi Al and List,
>
> I didn't mean to come across as pissy in my original post.  But it
> does irritate me a bit when people won't do basic homework.
>
> For example, if a person finds a possible rare Elvis collectible at a
> garage sale, that person should not immediately go to an Elvis mailing
> list or message board and start pestering people to identify it,
> appraise it, and buy it.  The correct course of action would be to go
> home, get on the internet and do some research.  Look for similar
> items, check the sales history of such items, check for signs that the
> item is a fake, etc.  Once that is done, if questions remain, then go
> out and contact an "expert" or ask for help.
>
> I'm not one of those RTFM people.  I understand that newbies need help
> with the complexities of the meteorite market and the science of
> meteoritics.  But I am seeing a laziness here where people have
> something that is *obviously* not a meteorite and a 2-minute Google
> search would reveal that fact.  Sure, they have no way of knowing at
> first, but one trip to Dr. Korotev's Gallery of Meteorwrongs would put
> the question to rest in 99% of cases.  And how does one find a site
> like Dr. Korotev's?  Simple, ask Google.  A simple search query of
> "meteorite identification" will yield a wealth of useful information
> including photos and tests that can be conducted by any layman.  If
> people would do that, they would save themselves a bunch of time,
> trouble and dashed hopes - and they would save the rest of us some
> time also.
>
> I have one person who has emailed me repeatedly over a course of
> months - telling me the same story over and over again.   He sends me
> the same photo attachments, again and again.  And I have politely told
> him that his specimen is likely not a meteorite and I pointed him to
> Dr. Korotev's website and a few other sources of information.  I also
> told him, that if he wants to be 100% certain, he should take it to a
> university and have either a geologist or a qualified person to look
> at it.  Instead, he will go away for a few days, send the same emails
> to a dozen other dealers, and then finally come back to me with the
> same story again.   I wonder how many times his story has ended up in
> our inboxes and how many times that members of this list have taken
> the time to be helpful and explain things to him.  It's almost like
> this person has some kind of "brain block" and they cannot process any
> information that says their specimen may not be a meteorite.  I
> finally had to block the person's email address, but he keeps sending
> emails about the same specimen to other dealers.
>
> The internet has been a mixed blessing for doing research.  It's very
> easy to go online and receive a schooling on any subject in the world.
>  And, unfortunately, it's easier to go online and ask somebody else to
> do your research for you.  I'm not expecting newbies to identify their
> own specimens, but I do expect people to do the most basic and
> fundamental homework before they start bombarding dealers and
> collectors with repetitious emails that amount to spam.
>
> And then there are the ones who get downright ANGRY if you try to help
> them out.  Some people are convinced they have a meteorite and if you
> tell them otherwise, then you are suddenly trying to rip them off and
> steal their valuable meteorite - even if there is no offer to buy it.
> I've had people tell me to go have sexual congress with myself because
> I dared to say that their moqui marble is not a meteorite.
>
> I like to be helpful and I enjoy helping eager newbies get started in
> the hobby.  All I ask is that people do a little homework first, and
> not expect other people to do all of the work for you.  Afterall,
> there is no better reading than meteorite articles, books and papers.
> Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read about meteorites??!  I
> can spend all day reading abstracts and articles about meteorites - of
> course, that makes me a total nerd.  LOL
>
> Meteorite Men has been a mixed blessing.  It has brought a new wave of
> people into the hobby and many of them are good people.  But it has
> also brought out the loonies and scammers - like the guy who mailed
> his toliet plunger to Adam Hupe and insisted that it was a CM2 just
>

Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Galactic Stone & Ironworks
Hi Al and List,

I didn't mean to come across as pissy in my original post.  But it
does irritate me a bit when people won't do basic homework.

For example, if a person finds a possible rare Elvis collectible at a
garage sale, that person should not immediately go to an Elvis mailing
list or message board and start pestering people to identify it,
appraise it, and buy it.  The correct course of action would be to go
home, get on the internet and do some research.  Look for similar
items, check the sales history of such items, check for signs that the
item is a fake, etc.  Once that is done, if questions remain, then go
out and contact an "expert" or ask for help.

I'm not one of those RTFM people.  I understand that newbies need help
with the complexities of the meteorite market and the science of
meteoritics.  But I am seeing a laziness here where people have
something that is *obviously* not a meteorite and a 2-minute Google
search would reveal that fact.  Sure, they have no way of knowing at
first, but one trip to Dr. Korotev's Gallery of Meteorwrongs would put
the question to rest in 99% of cases.  And how does one find a site
like Dr. Korotev's?  Simple, ask Google.  A simple search query of
"meteorite identification" will yield a wealth of useful information
including photos and tests that can be conducted by any layman.  If
people would do that, they would save themselves a bunch of time,
trouble and dashed hopes - and they would save the rest of us some
time also.

I have one person who has emailed me repeatedly over a course of
months - telling me the same story over and over again.   He sends me
the same photo attachments, again and again.  And I have politely told
him that his specimen is likely not a meteorite and I pointed him to
Dr. Korotev's website and a few other sources of information.  I also
told him, that if he wants to be 100% certain, he should take it to a
university and have either a geologist or a qualified person to look
at it.  Instead, he will go away for a few days, send the same emails
to a dozen other dealers, and then finally come back to me with the
same story again.   I wonder how many times his story has ended up in
our inboxes and how many times that members of this list have taken
the time to be helpful and explain things to him.  It's almost like
this person has some kind of "brain block" and they cannot process any
information that says their specimen may not be a meteorite.  I
finally had to block the person's email address, but he keeps sending
emails about the same specimen to other dealers.

The internet has been a mixed blessing for doing research.  It's very
easy to go online and receive a schooling on any subject in the world.
 And, unfortunately, it's easier to go online and ask somebody else to
do your research for you.  I'm not expecting newbies to identify their
own specimens, but I do expect people to do the most basic and
fundamental homework before they start bombarding dealers and
collectors with repetitious emails that amount to spam.

And then there are the ones who get downright ANGRY if you try to help
them out.  Some people are convinced they have a meteorite and if you
tell them otherwise, then you are suddenly trying to rip them off and
steal their valuable meteorite - even if there is no offer to buy it.
I've had people tell me to go have sexual congress with myself because
I dared to say that their moqui marble is not a meteorite.

I like to be helpful and I enjoy helping eager newbies get started in
the hobby.  All I ask is that people do a little homework first, and
not expect other people to do all of the work for you.  Afterall,
there is no better reading than meteorite articles, books and papers.
Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read about meteorites??!  I
can spend all day reading abstracts and articles about meteorites - of
course, that makes me a total nerd.  LOL

Meteorite Men has been a mixed blessing.  It has brought a new wave of
people into the hobby and many of them are good people.  But it has
also brought out the loonies and scammers - like the guy who mailed
his toliet plunger to Adam Hupe and insisted that it was a CM2 just
like Sonny's.  That was after the same guy emailed me and a dozen
other dealers about his toliet plunger.  And when Adam told him the
object was not a meteorite, the guy went off the deep end.  This is
another reason why I closely guard my telephone number.  LOL Well,
that and I have social anxiety and I am very weird about talking on
the phone until I get to know a person.  (some of you know this)

So please people, if you have found a suspected meteorite, before you
get your hopes up and starting contact dealers, go to the website
links I have provided and see if your specimen is a common
meteorwrong.  And if you do ask an "expert" about your specimen, and
that expert says your rock is not a meteorite, don't get mad and
badmouth that dealer before emailing a dozen other dealers about it.

Th

Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread Barry Hughes
  I buy from you guys...I've learned my lesson...I have about 5 people I
  buy from with the exception of some guys in Germany who are IMCA
  guys...and of course Dean in Austrailia.   I've been playing with some
  guy that says he's got like a 50 lb meteorite and would like to sell
  before he tests it.  Yea, I'll wire the money right out.

On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 4:47 PM, al mitt  wrote:
> Hi Mike and all,
>
> The problem we have today in collecting is the few dishonest
> collectors/dealers who purposely sell items they know aren't the real McCoy.
> It gets sold to Tom, or Steve and they sell it or trade it and it ends up in
> another collection and then maybe a few years later, they trade for a larger
> specimen and so the fraud piece then ends up in someone else's collection,
> maybe a nice person who would never do anything wrong but not knowing they
> have a NWA and not some historical piece they thought they bought.
>
> I too buy from reliable sources (always have and always will) or have got my
> material from museum trades and so forth. I think with the unreasonable
> perception of meteorite value, we're going to have a lot of bad items
> floating around with people trying to sell them.
>
> There are some less than experienced new collectors out there that buy in
> good faith. Most deals are solid but if they don't know who the bad guys are
> then they may buy material that is misrepresented. Buy from dealers who have
> been around for a while or an IMCA dealer.
>
> Do some research on the meteorite list in the search archives spot. Type in
> misrepresented meteorite, fraud, arrrest, judgement or something like Caveat
> Emptor. You'll find out some useful information.
>
> --AL Mitterling
>
>
> - Original Message - From: "Galactic Stone & Ironworks"
> 
> To: "Meteorite List" 
> Sent: Saturday, August 14, 2010 4:20 PM
> Subject: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy
> unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers
>
>
>> Hi  List and Lurkers,
>>
>> For the record, let me clearly state - I do NOT buy meteorites from
>> strangers.  I don't care how you found it, where you found it, or what
>> other people told you about it.  I'm not interested.
>>
>> Over the last week I have received no less than 20 emails (most copy
>> pasted to several other dealers) from people with strange specimens
>> that are obviously not meteorites.  I am not trying to be unfriendly
>> or harsh here, but please take 10 minutes to surf the web and read up
>> on the basics of meteorites.  A few simple Google searches will tell
>> you that your vesicle-covered lava rock is not a meteorite.  A simple
>> streak test will reveal that your specimen is hematite or magnetite.
>> If a person is not willing to do a small amount of homework before
>> bombarding me with multiple spam offers, then don't expect a reply
>> from me.  I just don't have the time or inclination to carry on a
>> discussion with every person who finds a weird rock.  I've tried many
>> times over the years to give thoughtful and helpful advice to people
>> who send me these emails and the majority of these people ignore what
>> I say and then contact several other dealers in the hopes that someone
>> will buy their story and rock.  If a person doesn't trust my
>> assessment of their specimen, then why contact me in the first
>> place?..it's because they didn't do their homework on me either.
>>
>> I am a small potatoes dealer - even if your weird specimen turns out
>> to be a rare meteorite, I cannot afford to buy it, unless it's offered
>> for less than $100 with free shipping, regardless of size - this also
>> goes for basketball-sized lunars that have been verified by a
>> MS-approved lab.  I'm just not in the market to buy such meteorites.
>>
>> I have a handful of trusted sources that I get my material from.
>> These sources are reliable with spotless reputations and I have a long
>> history of doing business with them.  If I am going to buy a meteorite
>> from anyone, it's going to be one of my regular sources - not some guy
>> in Laos, a prison guard, or anyone else who is not a MS or IMCA
>> member.
>>
>> To anyone reading this who has found a possible meteorite - go to
>> these websites and do your homework before contacting a meteorite
>> dealer :
>>
>> http://meteorite-identification.com/index.htm
>>
>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/meteorwrongs/meteorwrongs.htm
>>
>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/realities.htm
>>
>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/what_to_do.htm
>>
>> http://www.meteoritemarket.com/metid1.htm
>>
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteorite
>>
>> If after reading these links, you still think you have a meteorite,
>> please contact anyone else but me - unless I win the lottery and later
>> retract this statement.  LOL
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> MikeG
>
>
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Re: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers

2010-08-14 Thread al mitt

Hi Mike and all,

The problem we have today in collecting is the few dishonest 
collectors/dealers who purposely sell items they know aren't the real McCoy. 
It gets sold to Tom, or Steve and they sell it or trade it and it ends up in 
another collection and then maybe a few years later, they trade for a larger 
specimen and so the fraud piece then ends up in someone else's collection, 
maybe a nice person who would never do anything wrong but not knowing they 
have a NWA and not some historical piece they thought they bought.


I too buy from reliable sources (always have and always will) or have got my 
material from museum trades and so forth. I think with the unreasonable 
perception of meteorite value, we're going to have a lot of bad items 
floating around with people trying to sell them.


There are some less than experienced new collectors out there that buy in 
good faith. Most deals are solid but if they don't know who the bad guys are 
then they may buy material that is misrepresented. Buy from dealers who have 
been around for a while or an IMCA dealer.


Do some research on the meteorite list in the search archives spot. Type in 
misrepresented meteorite, fraud, arrrest, judgement or something like Caveat 
Emptor. You'll find out some useful information.


--AL Mitterling


- Original Message - 
From: "Galactic Stone & Ironworks" 

To: "Meteorite List" 
Sent: Saturday, August 14, 2010 4:20 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] For the record - I do not buy 
unsolicitedmeteorites from unknown sellers




Hi  List and Lurkers,

For the record, let me clearly state - I do NOT buy meteorites from
strangers.  I don't care how you found it, where you found it, or what
other people told you about it.  I'm not interested.

Over the last week I have received no less than 20 emails (most copy
pasted to several other dealers) from people with strange specimens
that are obviously not meteorites.  I am not trying to be unfriendly
or harsh here, but please take 10 minutes to surf the web and read up
on the basics of meteorites.  A few simple Google searches will tell
you that your vesicle-covered lava rock is not a meteorite.  A simple
streak test will reveal that your specimen is hematite or magnetite.
If a person is not willing to do a small amount of homework before
bombarding me with multiple spam offers, then don't expect a reply
from me.  I just don't have the time or inclination to carry on a
discussion with every person who finds a weird rock.  I've tried many
times over the years to give thoughtful and helpful advice to people
who send me these emails and the majority of these people ignore what
I say and then contact several other dealers in the hopes that someone
will buy their story and rock.  If a person doesn't trust my
assessment of their specimen, then why contact me in the first
place?..it's because they didn't do their homework on me either.

I am a small potatoes dealer - even if your weird specimen turns out
to be a rare meteorite, I cannot afford to buy it, unless it's offered
for less than $100 with free shipping, regardless of size - this also
goes for basketball-sized lunars that have been verified by a
MS-approved lab.  I'm just not in the market to buy such meteorites.

I have a handful of trusted sources that I get my material from.
These sources are reliable with spotless reputations and I have a long
history of doing business with them.  If I am going to buy a meteorite
from anyone, it's going to be one of my regular sources - not some guy
in Laos, a prison guard, or anyone else who is not a MS or IMCA
member.

To anyone reading this who has found a possible meteorite - go to
these websites and do your homework before contacting a meteorite
dealer :

http://meteorite-identification.com/index.htm

http://meteorites.wustl.edu/meteorwrongs/meteorwrongs.htm

http://meteorites.wustl.edu/realities.htm

http://meteorites.wustl.edu/what_to_do.htm

http://www.meteoritemarket.com/metid1.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteorite

If after reading these links, you still think you have a meteorite,
please contact anyone else but me - unless I win the lottery and later
retract this statement.  LOL

Best regards,

MikeG 



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