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"The SF approach: an awareness that things could have been different, that this is one of many possible worlds, that if you came to this world from some other planet, this would be a science fiction world."
- Neal Stephenson
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Prospecting Saturn's Rings |
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Solitary men traverse Saturn's treacherous rings looking for valuable materials. |
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| The rings of Saturn stretched like a level sheet in all directions, though actually composed of millions of tiny bodies. Homer Timkin carefully braked with the nose rockets till he floated motionlessly with respect to the ring’s own rotary motion around its primary. Then he eagerly donned his vac-suit.

('The Ring Bonanza' by Otto Binder)
There was vast treasure among the rings, if one could find it... In his vac-suit he used his reaction pistol to propel him down toward the glinting mass.
Timkin reached the glinting body he had previously spied. It was irregular in shape, some five feet in its greatest diameter. And it had a yellow tinge in the soft light shed by huge Saturn over his shoulder. Timkin permitted himself wild hope as he chipped off a piece with his belt pick. He held the chip up to his glassine visor, squinting at the grain.

(Reaction pistol and belt pick from 'The Ring Bonanza' by Otto Binder)
His face fell slack.
“Fool’s gold!” he muttered, flinging the piece away in a small fury...
Theory had it that there had once been a moon of Saturn. within two-and-a-half diameters of the giant planet. Gravitational stresses had then exploded the moon into countless fragments, which took up the same orbit after spreading out and thus came to be the unique rings...
SEEMINGLY, there had once been life, and civilization, on the destroyed moon. Fossil bones, once buried within the moon’s crust, now floated within the ring debris — and bits of machinery of some vanished and unknown race.
It was just pyrites, worth a few cents a pound in the market and not worth the hauling. Timkin sat down on- the miniature worldlet and cursed all the gods of luck and ill luck.
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Technovelgy from The Ring Bonanza,
by Otto Binder.
Published by Startling Stories in 1947
Additional resources -
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Compare to the space placers from The Day We Celebrate, a 1941 short story by Nelson S. Bond and harvesting Saturn's rings from The Computer Connection (1974) by Alfred Bester.
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