Calling all meteorite collectors and enthusiasts! There's a hot space rock at large and, as Indiana Jones would say,
it belongs in a museum.
Perhaps you can help put it back in one.
[caption id="attachment_111314" align="alignright" width="250"]
Mosaic of the asteroid Vesta made from images acquired by NASA's Dawn spacecraft. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCAL/MPS/DLR/IDA[/caption]
On Aug. 19 a burglary was
reported
at the
Sonnenborgh Museum and Observatory
in Utrecht, Netherlands, and one of the items missing is a meteorite that is thought to have originated from the asteroid
Vesta
.
Seen above in a photo from the museum's collection, the
Meteorite of Serooskerken was recovered from a rare fall in 1925 in the province of Zeeland. Only five meteorites have ever been found in the Netherlands, making the Serooskerken specimen somewhat of a national treasure – not to mention a valuable piece of our Solar System's history!
About 5–6% of all the meteorites found on Earth are thought to be from Vesta, the second-largest world in the main asteroid belt.
(Source)
It doesn't sound like the meteorite was the target of the burglary, but rather it just happened to be included with other things taken from the museum's safe.
If you have any information on the burglary or see this meteorite offered up for sale anywhere, please report it to the Sonnenborgh Museum here.
If you are a Dutch-speaker, audio of the news can be found here. (Any translations would be welcome in the comments!)
HT to Google+ Space Community member Andre van der Hoeven.