View Full Version : Astro Mining to be announced
Seems that some one are thinking of starting to do some astromining on some nearby astroids
http://blogs.discovery.com/inscider/2012/04/asteroid-mining.html#more
Markus
TLAM Strike
04-23-12, 08:56 PM
The only question I have is: will this be run by the Klingons? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oc_jYAtfDis)
Betonov
04-24-12, 07:11 AM
You think they'll hire marine merchants for piloting those spaceships. If so, where do I sign up :D
BossMark
04-24-12, 07:52 AM
As a former coal miner, I wonder if they will offer me a job :D
As a former coal miner, I wonder if they will offer me a job :D
No!:O:
Betonov
04-24-12, 08:11 AM
As a former coal miner, I wonder if they will offer me a job :D
You dig, I drive
BossMark
04-24-12, 09:23 AM
No!:O:
Thats not fair :wah:
nikimcbee
04-24-12, 09:32 AM
As a former coal miner, I wonder if they will offer me a job :D
I found a mining job for you.
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Kessel
Spoon 11th
04-24-12, 09:41 AM
As a former coal miner, I wonder if they will offer me a job :D
Never send a man to do a robot's job, so no.
HunterICX
04-24-12, 11:00 AM
''Not enough Minerals''
''scv ready''
HunterICX
Skybird
04-24-12, 11:13 AM
It'S a PR gag only. So far we have not found precious or rare metals in acceptable quantities in meteors and asteroids, they were instead quite ordinary and not special at all. But the financial costs to catch even small objects would start in the billions.
What we do not need on Earth is simple iron or nickel from space costing 2 billion dollars per ton. Nor do we need cosmic H2O-ice to sell it as a miraculous healing water for 100 million per flacon.
In case he meant it serious I think Cameron simply has not done his homework right.
Mining on the moon, well maybe that has a very (a VEEEERYYYY) longtime perspective, but catching and/or mining on the occasional asteroid or meteor for several billion dollars per mission is - well, Monty Python would have loved the idea.
Here's Astro ready to go to work in the mines:
http://images.wikia.com/hanna-barbera/images/3/37/Astro_Saluting_(AATSM).JPG
:D
...
Skybird
04-24-12, 06:44 PM
If they want to sink billions and trillions into some space program, then they should redefine the purpose and turn it into a meteor defence system. Statistically, the next mega-killing impact rubbing most life forms off this planet, is overdue since long.
So is the next big quake in the San Andreas area.
And the big eruption of the sooperdoopervulcano at Yellowstone.
On the other hand, these things would end the financial and economic crisis and nullify debts and negative budgets, it would also give the debate about global climate change a completly new direction.
So maybe better no meteor defence system then. :salute:
On the other hand, these things would end the financial and economic crisis and nullify debts and negative budgets, it would also give the debate about global climate change a completly new direction.
Perhaps we need some outside, universal threat to make us recognize this common bond. I occasionally think how quickly our differences worldwide would vanish if we were facing an alien threat from outside this world.
And TLAM, it'll be either Klingons or Cardassians. :03:
TLAM Strike
04-24-12, 07:10 PM
And TLAM, it'll be either Klingons or Cardassians. :03:
:hmmm:
I'm partial to Cardassian mining hardware...
http://img443.imageshack.us/img443/5996/ds9withwormhlolee.jpg
TLAM Strike
04-24-12, 09:45 PM
It'S a PR gag only. So far we have not found precious or rare metals in acceptable quantities in meteors and asteroids, they were instead quite ordinary and not special at all. But the financial costs to catch even small objects would start in the billions.
What we do not need on Earth is simple iron or nickel from space costing 2 billion dollars per ton. Nor do we need cosmic H2O-ice to sell it as a miraculous healing water for 100 million per flacon.
In case he meant it serious I think Cameron simply has not done his homework right.
Mining on the moon, well maybe that has a very (a VEEEERYYYY) longtime perspective, but catching and/or mining on the occasional asteroid or meteor for several billion dollars per mission is - well, Monty Python would have loved the idea.
The real need is for those basic metals to be used in space for construction of new stations and spacecraft, rather than building them here on Earth.
That water is remass for spacecraft, we don't need it down in the grav well.
The real prize is in the outer solar system; Jupiter has as much methane (a common fuel) as Earth has mass. Forget pipelines from Canada, we need space tankers from Europa! :hmmm:
nikimcbee
04-24-12, 10:07 PM
:hmmm:
I'm partial to Cardassian mining hardware...
http://www.televicious.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Kim-Kardashian1.jpg
TLAM Strike
04-24-12, 10:20 PM
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http://img840.imageshack.us/img840/5958/76836633.jpg
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