SALT LAKE CITY — A man searching for unique rocks in the Utah desert near the Nevada state line recently made an explosive discovery: a World War II-era bomb.

Craig Alvord told Salt Lake City news station KSL-TV this week that the 6-foot-long bomb is the best find he's made in more than 50 years of searching for stones.

Alvord notified the Air Force about the bomb. Though it wasn't discovered within base boundaries, HillAir Force Base spokesman Richard Essary says its bomb squad detonated it Tuesday afternoon with C4 plastic explosives.

Essary said it appears to be a practice bomb from the World War II era. It may have ended up there because of a test range in the area.

In this image taken from video on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2015, a World War II-era, 500 pound, sand-filled training bomb, discovered by Craig Alvord, is blown up the U.S. Air Force near Wendover, Utah. Alvord was searching for unique rocks in the west Utah desert near the Nevada state line when he made the discovery. Though it wasn't found within base boundaries, Hill Air Force Base spokesman Richard Essary says the bomb squad detonated it Tuesday afternoon with C4 plastic explosives. (Marc Weaver, KSL-TV/Deseret News via AP)

A World War II-era, 500 pound training bomb discovered by Craig Alvord is blown up on Oct. 12 by the Air Force near Wendover, Utah.

Photo Credit: Marc Weaver/AP

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