And then there's the two bottles - the little one with note is in possession of
the FS Museum and I'll find out just exactly where it happens to be. The big
1870s bottle with the unknown substance in it, found by Stephen Carter's crew
at the top of the Rose Bowl Room, and turned in to BLM archaeologist Pat
Flanary can no longer be accounted for. Drat - drat, drat, drat. When
artifacts are found, we need to get a handle on curation. Although, in the
case of FSCSP, it's all been "by the book" and thoroughly documented. And
everything left in situ, which is the proper thing to do.
________________________________
From: John Corcoran III <[email protected]>
To: Lee Skinner <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 12:11 AM
Subject: Re: [SWR] Lincoln Caverns register
Mike and Lee,
I recall seeing a register with red covers that someone brought out 10-20 years
ago. I will check on that. I scanned some of Pete Lindsley's slides of
Lincoln Caverns from 1969 and noticed that he had a photo of the first page of
the original Lincoln Caverns register (Discovery statement!). In a second
photo, Karen Lindsley was signing at the bottom of that page. (See attached.)
Regards, John
> Date: Mon, 17 Oct 2011 23:49:58 -0600
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [SWR] Lincoln Caverns register
>
> A register that had been in Lincoln Caverns at Fort Stanton Cave was bought
> out in a glass jar in the mid-1990s. Does anyone know what may
> have happened to it, or does anyone have it?
>
> Lee Skinner
>
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