Jar of government peanut butter sells for $761 … for good reason

The National Institute of Standards and Technology may be the most important government agency youve never heard of.

The NIST is in charge of the atomic clock, standards for cryptography, and something known as the Standard Reference Materials program.

Thats where the pricey peanut butter comes in.

Gizmodo notes the product known as "standard reference material 2387," along with more than a thousand other samples, are used to calibrate sensitive scientific equipment around the world.

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It works like this: A lab somewhere in the globe wants to make sure their instruments are working properly. They buy a reference material, like the peanut butter, and break it down. The readings of those devices are measured against the standards set by NIST.

The agency constantly checks for the products they provide. 2387 is popular because fatty foods are highly tested.

Some of the other products in stock includecrude oil from the Deepwater Horizon well, and whale blubber.

Gizmodo writes: The strangest part of the SRM catalog may be the array of human products: hair, urine, lung powder, liver powder, and a whole lot of serum. The products are also sorted by what they contain: THC, vitamin D, arsenic, etc.

More here.

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Jar of government peanut butter sells for $761 … for good reason

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