B
BoJangles2
Guest
I may have possibly found 2 new (undiscovered) impact craters, what should I do?
Ok, obviously I'm only an amateur, though I have been idly looking for impact craters for about 18 months via things like “Google Earth” and Nasa’s “World Wind” (just for the fun of it). I have inspiration from recent discoveries found through such mediums as above, touted and reported by the news over the last 2 years.
To my ultimate dismay, I’ve allready discovered many craters that were already previously documented (some of the most notable craters on earth mind you) .
So here I am, 18 months on, and I think I have a fairly good idea of what I'm looking for (after pinning many known craters (after the fact) and double checking with Wiki). I basically have a collection of about the 300+- possible sites around the world, which may or may not be impact craters.
So what should I do if (I think) I`ve really found an undiscovered impact crater?
Should I; email someone who studies this stuff (geologists) knowing full well they will not be able to substantiate such a find without visiting the site and sampling the rocks and writing a paper.
Or try to ascertain for myself whether such a site is an impact crater (via trial and error sampling, and letting people have a look at the results) and doing my best to write my own paper (knowing I have never authored a paper, but anything is achievable given enough time an effort).
The thing is I know how cagey scientists are when it comes to research data and papers. I also know full well that the anomalies I have found have a high probability of not being what I expect, but there is a chance (as small as it may be), that I have indeed found something undiscovered (in regards to impacts).
I could paste you many topographical views from many types of satellites and many different pictures of the very specific geological anomalies I'm talking about. But I'm a bit wary (due to the nature and history of scientific discoveries) of disclosing the particular sites I have found. So I'm asking the only academic and knowledgeable place I really have contact with, to give me their opinions.
What should I do?
---
Before anyone tells me I should have the site varified by someone knowledgeable. That particular process may lose me the credibility in what I have discovered (if in the small chance, it is what I expect), its well known that it’s not who discovers something, it’s who proves it that earns the recognition. Or should I just submit-and-email someone who knows, and let them take the credit for something I have found. Or is it the case that most professionals would give credit where credit is due.
The problem is, I have a long history of people taking credit for my own work (music, business ideas, market analysis), and it’s a case of 10 times bitting 11 times shy.
Has anyone got any suggestions?
Ps. Since it is a large world, and they are fairly small craters (5-10km) and fairly old (seemingly), I should be able to paste some pictures here without too much fear of being scooped (if they are indeed what I expect). But I’d like to hear the opinion of MW or other SDC heavy weights before proceeding.
Thanks for your time in advance, and I look forward to your response.
Pps. This may be in the wrong subsection/forum, I'm sorry for any inconvenience (smarter people hang out here)
Ok, obviously I'm only an amateur, though I have been idly looking for impact craters for about 18 months via things like “Google Earth” and Nasa’s “World Wind” (just for the fun of it). I have inspiration from recent discoveries found through such mediums as above, touted and reported by the news over the last 2 years.
To my ultimate dismay, I’ve allready discovered many craters that were already previously documented (some of the most notable craters on earth mind you) .
So here I am, 18 months on, and I think I have a fairly good idea of what I'm looking for (after pinning many known craters (after the fact) and double checking with Wiki). I basically have a collection of about the 300+- possible sites around the world, which may or may not be impact craters.
So what should I do if (I think) I`ve really found an undiscovered impact crater?
Should I; email someone who studies this stuff (geologists) knowing full well they will not be able to substantiate such a find without visiting the site and sampling the rocks and writing a paper.
Or try to ascertain for myself whether such a site is an impact crater (via trial and error sampling, and letting people have a look at the results) and doing my best to write my own paper (knowing I have never authored a paper, but anything is achievable given enough time an effort).
The thing is I know how cagey scientists are when it comes to research data and papers. I also know full well that the anomalies I have found have a high probability of not being what I expect, but there is a chance (as small as it may be), that I have indeed found something undiscovered (in regards to impacts).
I could paste you many topographical views from many types of satellites and many different pictures of the very specific geological anomalies I'm talking about. But I'm a bit wary (due to the nature and history of scientific discoveries) of disclosing the particular sites I have found. So I'm asking the only academic and knowledgeable place I really have contact with, to give me their opinions.
What should I do?
---
Before anyone tells me I should have the site varified by someone knowledgeable. That particular process may lose me the credibility in what I have discovered (if in the small chance, it is what I expect), its well known that it’s not who discovers something, it’s who proves it that earns the recognition. Or should I just submit-and-email someone who knows, and let them take the credit for something I have found. Or is it the case that most professionals would give credit where credit is due.
The problem is, I have a long history of people taking credit for my own work (music, business ideas, market analysis), and it’s a case of 10 times bitting 11 times shy.
Has anyone got any suggestions?
Ps. Since it is a large world, and they are fairly small craters (5-10km) and fairly old (seemingly), I should be able to paste some pictures here without too much fear of being scooped (if they are indeed what I expect). But I’d like to hear the opinion of MW or other SDC heavy weights before proceeding.
Thanks for your time in advance, and I look forward to your response.
Pps. This may be in the wrong subsection/forum, I'm sorry for any inconvenience (smarter people hang out here)