[Rockhounds] Terraforming Mars might be impossible? for now

Axel Emmermann axel.emmermann at telenet.be
Sun Mar 15 15:43:35 PDT 2020


I saw The Expanse... except for the ghost thing and the Blue Stuff I found it an excellent paradigm. This is really what mining will look like in maybe 50 years...
I believe that we're looking for a novel by Larry Niven... Hollowed out asteroids figurate in a few of his creations, don't they?

Axel  

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Rockhounds <rockhounds-bounces at rockhounds.drizzle.com> Namens J Bryan Kramer
Verzonden: zondag 15 maart 2020 23:02
Aan: ajs at silgro.com; Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem collectors <rockhounds at rockhounds.drizzle.com>
Onderwerp: Re: [Rockhounds] Terraforming Mars might be impossible? for now

I'll look for, is mostly set ar, no surprise I haven't seen it. That author is unknown.

Of course the current SF hit, the Expanse is mostly set around an asteroid belt civilization.

BK

“When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.” is mostly set around a Edmund Burke

J Bryan Krämer       North Florida, USA
photos at: http://pbase.com/photoburner


On Sun, Mar 15, 2020 at 4:39 PM Alan Silverstein <ajs at silgro.com> wrote:

> > I missed the that sf story you refer to Alan, I'll have to see if I 
> > can find it.
>
> I just did a little hunting but no joy, although there's an amazing 
> Wikipedia cluster of pages around fiction involving asteroids!  I 
> vaguely recall maybe it had something to do with getting one asteroid 
> into Earth orbit to capture (internally) a small black hole that had 
> dropped into the planet and was orbiting through it, wreaking havoc.
>
> I did find this webpage about "asteroid billiards", albeit not the 
> same core concept:
>
>
> https://www.space.com/41592-asteroid-billiards-smashing-dangerous-spac
> e-rocks.html
>
> You got me hunting further, and...  Aha!  Maybe it was "The Doomsday 
> Effect", 1986, by Thomas T Thomas; although I can't prove it's the 
> right one from the abstract, nor from the Amazon free-view pages 
> (early in the story).
>
> Cheers,
> Alan Silverstein
>
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