Project Exploration Dinosaur Expedition 2000

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Moving Day..cont'd

11:00am

Some of the hundreds of plaster jackets produced by the work at Camp 1. Each is labeled with a site number and a jacket number. These are the smallest of the jackets, most weighing less than 20 pounds.. Some of the jackets collected weighed upwards of 1000 pounds.

1:00pm

After an early lunch the team is right back at work. An "assembly line" strategy, with Chris locking it all in place from his perch in the truck, made quick work of the small jackets.

2:00pm

Last to be loaded, the 800-pound jacket containing the pair of Sarcosuchus skulls causes the tripod to teeter. Extra ballast (in the form of Gabe) helps to steady the slipping leg. Safety is the key consideration. Each of the jackets is secured with safety straps before it is hoisted into the air - protection for people, as well as for the jackets.

3:00pm

Exhausted after nearly 36 hours of physical labor, Greg and Hans rest momentarily. The truck was sent back to Agadez with the majority of our equipment, including our three large tents. After Camp 2 we will sort through everything and repack for Camp 3. (Check out the enormous sand ladder hanging off the back of the truck.)

4:00pm

Camp 1 is gone. We do our best to be responsible about the trash we produce. In addition to putting many of the food packages to a second use as packaging for small fragile fossils, we burn trash, and ship everything else (batteries, razor blades, plastic and glass) back to Agadez.

Once the jackets, sediment, and camp equipment were loaded onto the big truck, our 18-person crew (13 expedition members and 5 guards) loaded ourselves into the Land Rovers and headed 25 miles north to set up Camp 2. Strapped on our roof racks: three bags of plaster, collecting equipment, cots, sleeping bags, and food for a week - more supplies than most nomads travel with in a year.

ABOUT DINO

P.S. In case you are wondering why you don't see our friend Dino Dog in any of these pictures, it is because he is in Agadez under the care of our friend Moussa. Moussa has three small kids who love Dino and who are thrilled to take care of him while we are doing our most active prospecting. We expect he will join us in the field again for Camp 3. In the meantime, we are saving all the camel and gazelle bones we find in the desert for him to bury in Agadez.

Gabrielle Lyon
Team Member, 2000 Expedition to Niger.


Written By Gabrielle Lyon - All Photographs by Mike Hettwer unless noted
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