Doorstop turns out to be meteorite worth $100K
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — A Michigan man recently learned that a rock he’s been using as a doorstop is a meteorite worth $100,000.
The nearly 23-pound hunk of iron and nickel is the sixth largest meteorite found in Michigan, according to the Smithsonian Museum and Central Michigan University.
David Mazurek said he took his doorstop to the university for examination after seeing reports in January of meteorite pieces selling for thousands of dollars.
“I said, ‘Wait a minute. I wonder how much mine is worth,’” Mazurek said.
University Geology Professor Mona Sirbescu first identified the piece as more than just a rock, but she sent two small slices of the rock to the Smithsonian for confirmation.
“I could tell right away that this was something special,” she said. “It’s the most valuable specimen I have ever held in my life, monetarily and scientifically.”
Mazurek said the meteorite came with a barn he bought in 1988 in Edmore. He says the farmer who sold him the property told him it landed in his backyard in the 1930s.
“The story goes that it was collected immediately after they witnessed the big boom and the actual meteorite was dug out from a crater,” Sirbescu said.
More tests are being conducted to see if the meteorite contains rare elements.