Largest piece of Mars on Earth fetches $5.3M at auction

apnews.com

37 points by avonmach 4 days ago


chiffre01 - 6 hours ago

For the sake of price stability, let's hope larger pieces are not found.

ElevenLathe - 5 hours ago

Makes me wonder if this is a potential funding stream for private Mars missions: Bring back a load of rocks, auction them off on Sotheby's. What would be the optimal amount to bring back to make a profit (or at least offset some of the costs) without tanking the price?

isoprophlex - 5 hours ago

We saw and touched a smaller, metallic meteorite fragment last year in a museum. Touching it was an incredible experience. It had a very noticable, distinct smell. I couldnt get enough of running my fingers along the cold, pitted surface of it.

One of my kids still sometimes snickers and offhandedly comments "this metal was once a star" when he sees or handles solid metallic objects.

I'd definitely try to buy something like this if I had "fuck you" amounts of money

mongol - 8 hours ago

How do we know that piece of rock originates on Mars?

JKCalhoun - 7 hours ago

Billionaires are wild. Bones of a T-Rex and now extra-planetary artifacts. Apparently it's a bragging-rights club?

It's easy to sit on the sidelines and talk about how, if we were a billionaire, we would use our money to try to improve the planet and the people and animals on it. But I'd still like to think though that I would do exactly that.

deadbabe - 4 hours ago

The rock will now be broken up and pieces of it will be used for expensive Mars edition watches, creating a greater return on this $5.3 million investment. Imagine a piece of mars right on your wrist.

Sophia95 - 8 hours ago

Was it bought by Elon?