I would really like someone to convince me of those apparent grades.. Folks have been waxing enthusiastic since forever on no ground truth whatsoever. THe arguments are good, but are just that.
The market for rare earths and secondary metals associated with nickel iron deposits are small but lucretive. That is because they are scant enough. Change that and no one really cares.
We can globally absorb a lot of copper, iron, zinc and we love precious metals. Yet no one weants to store a mile of rails in his back yard.
We may mine this stuff some day and ship it to our space station with its own smelter for space based fabrication. Just not so soon.
NASA finds rare metal asteroid worth more than global economy
Cecilia Jamasmie | October 29, 2020 | 3:43 am Base Metals Markets News Suppliers & Equipment Africa Asia Australia Canada China Europe Latin America USA Iron Ore Nickel
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https://www.mining.com/nasa-finds-rare-metal-asteroid-worth-more-than-global-economy/
NASA’s Hubble Telescope has obtained images of an asteroid so rich in rare metals that its worth puts our global economy to shame. Think $10,000 quadrillion ($10,000,000,000,000,000,000), compared to the world’s economy, which was worth about $142 trillion in 2019.
The rare heavy-metal object, called “16 Psyche,” is one of the largest celestial bodies in the Solar System’s main asteroid belt, orbiting between Mars and Jupiter. It’s located at roughly 370 million km (230 million miles) from Earth and measures 226 km (140 miles) across.
16 Psyche was actually discovered in 1852, but this is the first time scientists can get a closer look. What makes it special is that, unlike most asteroids that are either rocky or icy, 16 Psyche is made almost entirely of iron and nickel, a study published this week in The Planetary Science Journal shows.
Tracy Becker, a planetary scientist and author of the paper, says the asteroid is likely the leftover core of a planet that never properly formed because it was hit by objects in our solar system and effectively lost its mantle and crust.
Closer look
While Hubble has been able to get clear images of 16 Psyche, only a visit to its surface will reveal what it’s really like. NASA already has plans to do just that as part of its Discovery Program, with an orbiter set to launch from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center in August 2022.
The mission would arrive at 16 Psyche in January 2026 and spend at least 21 months mapping and studying the asteroid’s unique properties.
“To understand what really makes up a planet and to potentially see the inside of a planet is fascinating,” says Becker, who works at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas. “Once we get to Psyche, we’re really going to understand if that’s the case, even if it doesn’t turn out as we expect.”
If the mission could kindly bring the asteroid back to Earth, every person on the planet — all 7.8 billion of us — would get roughly $1.2 billion, based on current metal prices.
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