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Walter Granger
relaxing after a day of fossil hunting in southwest Wyoming
with Jacob L. Wortman, Olaf A. Peterson, and Albert "Bill"
Thomson. Granger also trapped for mammals and birds, and
usually would do so on subsequent expeditions.
Green River Camp,
1895. (107k)
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Walter Granger and
friend. Granger is holding a "Marsh Pick" in his right hand,
so named after fossil-collecting pioneer Othniel C. Marsh.
Eocene expedition
into the Bridger Basin, Wyoming, 1905. (138k)
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Assistant collector
Peter Kaisen's photograph of Walter Granger collecting in
the Gobi Desert. Central Asiatic
Expeditions (Mongolia),1923. (98k)
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Anna Granger with
James V. Wong and chairbearers on way to fossil-collecting
campsite in the western highlands 1,200 ft. above the
Yangtze Valley in Sichuan Province. Behind them is a "dragon
bone" ridge. Central Asiatic
Expeditions (China), 1922-23. (115k)
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Walter Granger's
improvised headquarters at the T'an family ancestral temple
in the highlands village of Yangjingou, Sichuan Province.
Seated (l. to r.): Walter Granger and James V. Wong; 2nd row
standing: Chow, "Buckshot", Chih, and Huei; 3rd row
standing: 2 Sichuanese coolies. Central Asiatic
Expeditions (China), 1922-23. (112k)
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Camel caravan
bringing water and supplies in from Tamia to Walter
Granger's and George Olsen's campsite at Qasr el-Sagha. Note
chunk of fossilized tree wood in foreground and fossil boxes
awaiting camel transport to Tamia. Faiyum of Egypt
Expedition, 1907. (88k)
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Walter Granger (r.)
and George Olsen (l.) on camels in front of temple ruin at
Qasr el-Sagha. Ibrahim Salim (l.) and Chief Reis Daoud
Mohammed (r.) stand in front. This was the point at about
which the Faiyum's now-vanished Lake Moeris rose to its
highest level. Faiyum of Egypt
Expedition, 1907. (219k)
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Walter Granger is
in the foreground in this photograph, sitting up in his
bedroll. Peter Kaisen is standing in the background and, to
the right, W.D. Matthew is up on his elbow in his bedroll.
This productive area in southern Wyoming northwest of
Laramie hosts Como Bluff and Bone Cabin Quarry. Como Bluff
was originally discovered by the crew laying track for the
Union Pacific railway. The famous Bone Cabin site was
discovered in 1897 by Walter Granger when he rode over that
way from near by Como Bluff late in the season to
reconnoiter for possible new localities. He noticed an old
sheepherder's cabin that was built from large pieces of
weathered-out fossil dinosaur bone, hunks of which lay
scattered all about. The find was kept quiet over the winter
until the 1898 season when it was formally opened as Bone
Cabin Quarry. Bone Cabin Quarry,
1899. (117k)
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Walter Granger
chatting with his young apprentice Hassin Mohammed. Hassin
was the only youth in the Arab work party and was the son of
Daoud Mohammed. Faiyum of Egypt
Expedition, 1907. (105k)
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Fossil-hunting
party in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. Standing (l. to r.) are
Walter Granger, student intern Barnum Brown, Henry Snyder,
Clayton Wetherill, and Jacob L. Wortman. Expedition into the
San Juan Basin, 1896. (159k)
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Walter and Anna
Granger aboard the S.S.
Vaderland on February 1,
1912, after their three-month tour of the major paleontology
institutions in Europe. They sailed back to New York City
from Antwerp. European Museum
Tour, 1911-1912. (125k)
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