So to tease this out a bit:
Where should any 'speculative' mining attempts begin? And what should be sought after first?
My vote is for the Malapert Mountain area, and water ice should be sought for.
Then I say lets try to get a hold of some He3.
The problem with He3 is that it's essentially just another kind of oil. If I'm remembering the numbers correctly, we're likely to run out of it in a century or two, and then we'll be in the same pickle we're in now, albeit sans global warming.
The problem with He3 is that it's essentially just another kind of oil. If I'm remembering the numbers correctly, we're likely to run out of it in a century or two, and then we'll be in the same pickle we're in now, albeit sans global warming.
I'm also fairly dubious about the prospects of mining lunar titanium, or similar industrial metals, profitably. It just costs too much to launch it off of the moon. Although, I suppose with a sufficiently large lunar infrastructure (such as extensive lunox production or a lunar space elevator, which is supposed to be doable with Kevlar or Spectra, rather than CNTs.), you might be able to get launch costs down enough to make it work. And of course I'm all for any excuse to build a moonbase.![]()
The bigest drawback of fusion is that, like lunar water, it's only theoretical. Show me a self-sustained fusion reaction and I'll take it seriously.
That's more koolaid I've been fed since I was a little kid. "Fusion is close. Right around the corner!" It's like the boy who cried wolf.
Okay, just go outside at about noon, and look straight up. There's a self-sustained fusion reaction.