scientists just learned that the Moon is made entirely of Silver and Silver dust on the surface, and gold and platinum underneath.
Not in the local cosmic vicinity, luckily (or otherwise), by latest count there is one actual, individual planet that is a solid diamond, five or so planets' worth of gold and six or seven worth of platinum (all of these latter PM's hanging around in a single nebula as a result of two neutron stars colliding).
Oh no. Guess I won't be buying that used Russian space ship now ... Gold declines after U.S. economic data, turns lower for the week ==> https://www.marketwatch.com/story/g...o-weekly-gain-ahead-of-jobs-report-2017-11-03
That's a relief. As long as the change is based on fabricated numbers then it will eventually right itself. I was afraid that maybe a huge new gold mine has been discovered.
We may yet be rudely impacted by a cruise-ship-sized solid gold comet from some still ridiculously obscure, elusive Precious Metals Quadrant of the Oort Cloud. Hey, maybe Voyager 2 can get back to us on that!
Also known as, "How to Beat Coining Dies to Death in Three Easy Lessons". For Canada, due to the massive nickel deposits around Sudbury, it was "smoke 'em if you got 'em".
The heaviest element cooked up by normal star life is basically carbon, a good start along with hydrogen for stuff like methane. Anything heavier requires a more violent star death of some kind.
Yeah, I loved it too until they started throwing extra dimensions at me. I found that the most dimensions I could think in was five or so.
There are several things I can imagine but not grasp: A. Infinity B. Eternity C. Multi-Dimensionality D. Fried Ice Cream