THE GRANGER REPORT (http://users.rcn.com/granger.nh.ultranet/news.html)Update - 13 January 2009A. - Fact Sheet #1 for Kids (and Adults):1. Walter Granger's first expedition to the American West was in 1894. Heaccompanied Jacob Wortman's fossil hunting party which included Olaf Peterson andAlbert Thomson.2. In 1896, Granger replaced Peterson and, with Wortman and others, visited famedamateur archaeologist Richard Wetherill at the newly discovered, now famousAnazasi site at Chaco Canyon (New Mexico). From there the fossil hunters headeddeep into the San Juan Basin.3. The famous dinosaur locality now known as Bone Cabin Quarry near Medicine Bow,Wyoming, was discovered by Walter Granger in late August of 1897. Excavation ofthe site began in 1898. Some sources incorrectly associate Barnum Brown and/orothers with this discovery. Not so. Barnum Brown and/or others had nothing to dowith Bone Cabin Quarry's discovery or its subsequent excavation. The key playersin the excavation of Bone Cabin Quarry following Granger's discovery of it wereGranger, Jacob Wortman, Albert Thomson, Harold Menke and Peter Kaisen. Wortman wasgone by 1899, leaving Granger in charge.4. Walter Granger was the first US paleontologist to collect on a non-Americancontinent. It was in the Fayum of Egypt in 1907. George Olsen assisted him, as didEgyptian workers.5. Walter Granger was the first paleontologist to collect in the Yangtze Riverbasin. He was assisted by Buckshot (Kan Chuen Pao), Chow (Chao Hui Lu), Liu (LiuTa Ling) and others.6. Walter Granger was the first paleontologist to collect in Inner and OuterMongolia. In 1922, the Mongolia expedition party was a small reconnaissance partylimited to a paleontologist, two geologists, a zoologist and a cinemaphotographer.It was much the same in 1923, except that three assistants in paleontology wereadded and the cinemaphotographer was dropped. It was not until the 1925 party thatother scientific disciplines were added, such as archaeology, topography, andpaleobotany. The cinemaphotographer was brought back, as well.George Olsen assisted Granger on two Mongolia expeditions (1923 and 1925) andduring winters in the laboratory in Peking (1923-25), as did Chinese and Mongolianworkers. Buckshot, Chow, and Liu served throughout. Peter Kaisen assisted inMongolia for one summer (1923) and Albert Thomson served there for two (1928 and1930).7. The first find of whole dinosaur eggs was by George Olsen at Flaming Cliffs inOuter Mongolia on July 10, 1923. This was not the first discovery of dinosaureggs. In 1869, the French claimed to find a dinosaur eggshell fragment in thePyrenees. However, this claim remained in doubt. The first scientifically acceptedfind of a dinosaur egg was an eggshell fragment found by Walter Granger onSeptember 2, 1922, at Flaming Cliffs, the same place Olsen made his discovery ofwhole dinosaur eggs and their nest a year later. Some sources mistakenly cite thedate for Olsen's find as July 13, 1923. Not so. It was made on July 10, 1923.Olsen promptly notified Granger of his find. Roy Chapman Andrews, however, did notbecome aware of it for nearly another two weeks. (Anyone know why? Hint: location,location, location--what was Andrews doing when Olsen found the eggs?)
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