A meteorite weighing 2.1kg, which crashed through the roof of a house, turned an Indonesian coffin maker, 33, into a millionaire instantly.
The meteorite smashed through the porch along the outside of Josua Hutagalung’s house when he was working on a coffin in Kolang, North Sumatra.
The single stone, weighing 2.1kg, left a large hole in the tin roof and ended up buried 15cm deep in the soil beside the house.
The space rock left a large hole in the tin roof and ended up buried 15cm deep in the soil beside the house, Dailymail UK reported.
The meteorite is estimated to be 4.5 billion years old and is classified as CM1/2 carbonaceous Chondrite, an extremely rare variety – worth around $1.85million, or $857 per gram.
Meteorites are priced by the gram with the cheapest pure-rock varieties fetching $0.50 to $5.00 per gram, and those with rare extra-terrestrial metals selling for up to $1,000 per gram.
Josua, who managed to dig the rock out, said the meteorite was still warm and partially broken when he touched it. He told Kompas that he brought it into the house.
The coffin maker said that the sound was so loud that parts of the house were shaking too. After searching the site, he saw that the tin roof of the house had broken.
‘I strongly suspect that this rock is indeed an object from the sky that many people call a meteorite.
Because it is impossible someone deliberately threw it or dropped it from above.’
Local residents in the area had heard large booming sounds that shook their houses. Dozens have visited Josua’s house to see the rare object. ‘Many people have come, out of curiosity, and want to see the stone,’ he said.
The meteorite, which is estimated to be 4.5 billion years old, is worth around £1.4 million. Josua was given the equivalent to 30 years’ salary for the space rock, according to The Sun.
The father of three said he would use some of the money to build a church in his community.
‘I have also always wanted a daughter, and I hope this is a sign that I will be lucky enough now to have one,’ he told The Sun.
US meteorite expert Jared Collins, who secured part of the main mass, shipped the meteorite to the US, where it was bought by Jay Piatek, a doctor and meteorite collector from Indianapolis, according to the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Texas, US.
The meteorite is classified as CM1/2 carbonaceous Chondrite, an extremely rare variety, the Institute recorded.
Three further fragments of the meteorite were found in nearby areas when it crashed in August – one was discovered in a paddy field less than 3km from Josua’s home.
The meteorite, which has been officially named Kolang, is estimated to have a total weight of 2.5kg, according to the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Texas, US.
The interior of the meteor is dark grey and black, with small light-colored speckles.