An urgent search is under way in Western Australia after a tiny capsule containing a radioactive substance went missing.
The casing contains a small quantity of radioactive Caesium-137, which could cause serious illness if touched.
It was lost between the town of Newman and the city of Perth in mid-January – a distance of roughly 1,400km (870 miles).
The public has been warned to stay away from the capsule if they see it.
It was being transported on a truck between a mine site north of Newman in the Pilbara region and the north-eastern parts of Perth between 10-16 January when it was mislaid. Caesium-137 is a substance commonly used in mining operations.
The Department of Fire and Emergency Services (DFES) has said the capsule cannot be weaponised but could cause radiation burns and have other longer-term risks like cancer.
The object emits a "reasonable" amount of radiation, Dr Andrew Robertson, the state's chief health officer and Radiological Council chair, said.
"Our concern is that someone will pick it up, not knowing what it is," he said. "They may think it is something interesting and keep it, or keep it in their room, keep it in their car, or give it to someone."
DFES has released an illustration of the object, which measures 6mm by 8mm.
The sites where the transportation began and ended have been searched and efforts are under way to figure out the exact route and stops that were made to narrow down the field of search.
Anyone who sees the object is asked to call the DFES and to seek urgent medical assistance if they think they have come into contact with it.
The race to make diesel engines run on hydrogen
Radioactive device missing in Malaysia
US plutonium stolen last year still missing
Police unit disbanded after Tyre Nichols' death
Unanswered questions from Memphis arrest videos
Zahawi sacked from UK government after tax row
The joy and the trauma of carrying a celebrity's baby
'Elon Musk has made me embarrassed to drive my Tesla'
How learning this language rewires the brain
What happens when 'child geniuses' grow up?
How Western tanks can change the Ukraine war
Have Sunak's first 100 days been calm or 'cringe'?
Reneé Rapp: From Sex Lives of College Girls to pop stardom
A makeover for iconic 200-year-old India building
Could a fungal pandemic turn us all into zombies?
A remedy for low motivation and passion
The 90s cop show that changed TV
How one volcano could make global chaos
© 2023 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.