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Man Becomes Rich When Meteorite From Heaven Crashes Through His Roof

Man Becomes Rich When Meteorite From Heaven Crashes Through His Roof
A rare CM1/2 carbonaceous chondrite meteorite worth a million bucks hits the home of Indonesian coffin maker Josua Hutagalung.

One minute, you're minding your own business, working outside your house building a coffin, and the next minute a smoking meteorite worth a small fortune hurtles through the roof of your veranda and winds up buried in the earth next to your living room.

It wasn't a typical day, but that's exactly what happened to a 33-year-old Indonesian coffin maker named Josua Hutagalung. "I was working on a coffin near the street in front of my house when I heard a booming sound that made my house shake. It was as if a tree had fallen on us," the father of three told the Sun. "[The meteorite] was too hot to pick up so my wife dug it out with a hoe and we took it inside."

Weighing in at roughly 4.5 pounds, the 4 billion-year-old meteorite was later classified as the extremely rare CM1/2 carbonaceous chondrite variety.

In the space-rock market, it sells for $850 per gram. When you do the math, that's roughly $1,858,556 of ka-ching!

As soon as news of the incident went public, American space rock guru Jared Collins hopped on a plane to Sumatra to purchase the precious cargo. After fielding a crazy number of offers, Collins sold the extra-terrestrial treasure to Indianapolis-based meteorite collector Dr. Jay Piateck, who mailed it for safe-keeping to the Center for Meteorite Studies at Arizona State University (where it's currently being stored in liquid nitrogen).

While Hutagalung won't reveal the exact dollar amount he wound up accepting for his 4.5-pound chunk of outer-space booty, guesstimates range well in excess of a million bucks.

With his new-found fortune, Hutagalung says he plans to help build a church for his community. He's also got a more personal wish. Money can't buy it, but he's optimistic that his streak of good fortune hasn't run its full course just yet.

"I have always wanted a daughter, and I hope this is a sign that I will be lucky enough now to have one," he said.

As far as signs go, wishing on a meteorite might not be the same as wishing on a shooting star, but, odds are, having been singled out by meteor manna from heaven may go a long way toward upping those odds considerably. Here's hoping they do.

WATCH the video taken by Josua…

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