To: nikos1121
Wow - the ultrs-rare “Winchester 1783”! You would think that even the geniuses at Yahoo or the “archeologists” who found the rifle would:
1. Recognize an 1873 Winchester with the octagon barrrel, full magazine, curved steel butt as a very common artifact of its time and
2. Read the serial number at the wrist and then give the Cody museum a call to see the exact date of manufacture and to whom it was sold from the factory.
3. Then, if their brains were really in full gear, examine the chamber and magazine to see if it’s loaded and after clearing it, read the head stamp on the cartridges to get an idea when it was loaded and where the ammo might have been purchased.
But it’s just Yahoo. They were just lucky to recognize that it was an old rifle.
20 posted on
01/16/2015 8:37:46 AM PST by
Chainmail
(A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
To: Chainmail
Wow - the ultrs-rare Winchester 1783! You would think that even the geniuses at Yahoo or the archeologists who found the rifle would: 1. Recognize an 1873 Winchester with the octagon barrrel, full magazine, curved steel butt as a very common artifact of its time and 2. Read the serial number at the wrist and then give the Cody museum a call to see the exact date of manufacture and to whom it was sold from the factory. 3. Then, if their brains were really in full gear, examine the chamber and magazine to see if its loaded and after clearing it, read the head stamp on the cartridges to get an idea when it was loaded and where the ammo might have been purchased. But its just Yahoo. They were just lucky to recognize that it was an old rifle.
At least they didn't call it an AK1873.....
To: Chainmail
I noticed that the article said it was first discovered in November, 2014. I mean, are they saying it was first noticed by some Jim Dandy US Forest Ranger... who made note of it, but left it there, and then discovered again more recently?
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