It sure does. And, apparently, it's about to get a lot more attention.
It is the hardest proof of a peak of human achievement, far rarer than any gem and maybe worth $5 million or more.It's also a drab little black pebble encased in a plastic ball and glued to a slightly kitschy early 1970s plaque. Which might help explain how the state's official moon rock ended up in a desk drawer at the Department of Commerce, then spent the past seven years in the custody of an N.C. State University professor who took it on occasional visits to school groups.
No longer. On Tuesday, the professor, Christopher Brown, brought the rock and other artifacts that it came with to the state Museum of Natural Sciences, where it is expected to go on display in a major new wing called the Nature Research Center when it opens in the fall of 2011.
Read the rest of this News & Observer article, by Jay Price, here.
Here's more from Chris Brown: