As an illustration of the accuracy with which such persons often observe and remember facts, may be mentioned a case in which one of these traditional lost specimens was being inquired after from an octogenarian who remembered seeing it some forty years before, and when asked if the "holes" in the stone were "round" he replied "No, they were sort o' three-cornered," a remark which rendered it certain that the object was really a cycad.Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!
Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!
Mr. Bibbins always frames his questions with skill, taking care not to ask leading ones, realizing that the desire to please is liable to color the answer and make it conform to what it is supposed he desires to have said. He therefore always takes pains to induce these people to tell what they know independently of any suggestion on his part.Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!
Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!
As an illustration of the accuracy with which such persons often observe and remember facts, may be mentioned a case in which one of these traditional lost specimens was being inquired after from an octogenarian who remembered seeing it some forty years before, and when asked if the "holes" in the stone were "round" he replied "No, they were sort o' three-cornered," a remark which rendered it certain that the object was really a cycad.
Since the early part of the twentieth century, when local iron mining ceased, very few dinosaur bones have been recovered from Maryland and its environs. This is, for the most part, due to a lack of knowledge about local bones by the general public. In addition, modern excavation methods using large machines have removed workers from close contact with the ground. Two noteworthy but isolated discoveries took place in Washington, D.C. In 1898, some men digging a sewer at First and F Streets, S.E., found the remains of a carnosaur ("Dryptosaurus," or a related species). Workers found a very large legbone from Astrodon, a brachiosaurid, while building the McMillan Water Filtration Plant at First and Channing Streets, N.W. in 1942. There have been other finds at other locations, but much needs to be done. The bones are still here, but few people are looking for them!