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Digital ID
geo000665-025
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I agree.mMiWmmk WSMiWfMM »S ?&fc:•r>f»S$ 111 » « •W.V. M M ? H I »Wmp $$m ;iva;. K I M i i i l l i I«Mh8MMMi l$:-:^flii* il|:S v.v.v//Xv/!vW*5: !v»*I*«vM w ill .fwl H&&5**w ? i m f ! PAW»**VA apS^HMMj|M .WA illliiw i &MmmSm I B B & w w :;i:ili|i: m K sfgigpg i1n11 ‘SwW ;.v .v 'X’lwX* CHART! NG TH E U R O lfC l SOME BIG TOOTHACHE -~* Charles Roza?re, curator of archaeology for the Nevada Stcfe Museum, displays the chewing side of a mammoth tooth unearthed at Tule Springs. Rozaire holdr a tooth from a baby mammoth in his fingers. MORE M O D E R g ^ p rip O S ( — Scier pipde hay while fhpi^ift iSiehlning at 1 ihe reasons was t^ S fe ^ iF pneumatic jc •Ilk# fhe^a^jRabefe^Orllr^.isr podding tl #/ _ , JKck Brooks, left, charts the progress in removing the bones ofa prehistoric bison, a relative of the preidi^day^ Am erican bison, while John Mawby dusts away soil from the fragile remains of an animal thgasands of years old. \ * t ” \ > ; Ji ^ ! ' ^ j j