PDA

View Full Version : News Misleading title of the day: 2nd Amendment advocate likely dead in Nevada desert.


Rain Man
01-15-2015, 11:39 AM
I just felt like it was a good day for an accurate but misleading title. I bet they find a body somewhere near this gun.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/01/14/the-mystery-of-the-132-year-old-winchester-rifle-found-propped-against-a-national-park-tree/

The mystery of the 132-year-old Winchester rifle found propped against a national park tree

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=http://img.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp-content/uploads/sites/21/2015/01/10869701_930528703659121_2639941770128675848_o-768x1024.jpg&w=1484

Archaeologists conducting surveys in Nevada’s Great Basin National Park came upon a gun frozen in time: a .44-40 Winchester rifle manufactured in 1882. It was propped up against a juniper tree.

“They just happened to notice the rifle under the tree,” said Nichole Andler, Basin National Park’s chief of interpretation. The public will get a chance to view the rifle over the weekend.

Although staff have no idea how the rifle ended up there, “it looked like someone propped it up there, sat down to have their lunch and got up to walk off without it,” Andler said.

It’s remarkable that anyone was able to spot the gun back in November, as it had blended in so well with its surroundings. The unloaded gun appears to have been left undisturbed for more than 100 years; its wooden base had turned gray and was partially buried, and the barrel had rusted.

Though not in very good shape, the rifle is certainly salvageable, Andler said, and it will be preserved so it remains in its current state.

While the rifle’s back story remains a mystery, the history of the place offers some clues: Great Basin was primarily a mining site at the time, but could have also been home to grazing cattle and sheep. The gun may have also been the relic of game hunting in the area.

This particular model of Winchester rifle was quite popular at the time, so it wasn’t necessarily a rare and precious item for a person to leave behind. The year this particular rifle was made, 25,000 others were also manufactured. In fact, the prevalence of the gun may have contributed to a massive price drop, from costing $50 in 1873 to $25 in 1882. Here is a close-up of the rifle:

“It was one of those things, sort of the everyman’s rifle,” Andler said. The gun is often referred to “as the gun that won the West,” she added.

Park staff are now combing through old newspaper articles and records to try and unearth any information as to how the rifle ended up against that tree.

“It probably has a very good and interesting story,” Andler said, “but it probably is a story that could have happened to almost anyone living this sort of extraordinary existence out here in the Great Basin Desert.”

Rausch
01-15-2015, 11:43 AM
The Nevada desert is a motherfucker...

RNR
01-15-2015, 11:50 AM
It would seem the tree would have greatly changed over time. Maybe thegun was laid down and the tree grew under it~

Rain Man
01-15-2015, 11:51 AM
It would seem the tree would have greatly changed over time. Maybe thegun was laid down and the tree grew under it~


That's a really interesting point. I hadn't thought about that. Now I'd like to know how old the tree was.

Some of those desert trees do get really old, though. I bet it's possible that the owner set it against a mature tree and it hasn't really changed that much.

Rain Man
01-15-2015, 11:53 AM
The Nevada desert is a mother****er...

I had to look this park up because I'd never heard of it. It's in eastern Nevada right along the Utah border. If you were wandering around there in the 1880s you were probably a pretty rugged hombre.

Dave Lane
01-15-2015, 12:16 PM
It would seem the tree would have greatly changed over time. Maybe thegun was laid down and the tree grew under it~

Excellent point. It's high and dry there.

kepp
01-15-2015, 12:23 PM
This particular model of Winchester rifle was quite popular at the time, so it wasn’t necessarily a rare and precious item for a person to leave behind. The year this particular rifle was made, 25,000 others were also manufactured. In fact, the prevalence of the gun may have contributed to a massive price drop, from costing $50 in 1873 to $25 in 1882. Here is a close-up of the rifle:

So I'm betting in the 1880's that a person used their rifle for survival, especially in that area. So you would absolutely not want to leave it behind.

Hog's Gone Fishin
01-15-2015, 12:25 PM
What would have been cool was if someone had left it in the crevice of a limb and the limb grew into it. Kinda like you see old supporting cables.

Interesting story.

DenverChief
01-15-2015, 12:25 PM
Thats really cool. surprised it sat there for so long w/o going noticed

Discuss Thrower
01-15-2015, 12:26 PM
LIMBS UP DON'T CUT

Rain Man
01-15-2015, 12:28 PM
So I'm betting in the 1880's that a person used their rifle for survival, especially in that area. So you would absolutely not want to leave it behind.

Yeah, I found that conjecture kind of odd. I can't imagine a person walking off and forgetting it. And if you did, I'd think you would circle back for it. It's not like being in a car where you're a hundred miles away by the time you look down at the empty holster.

I would think the more likely scenarios are:

1. You were camping or hunting and you set it down to go use the men's room, and something happened that killed you (heart attack or rattlesnake or something).

2. I guess I could see a scenario where something in the gun broke badly and you didn't think it could be repaired, so you left it behind. I'm not sure what would be that big a problem, but maybe they could identify it now.

3. Another possible scenario could be that you ran out of water and you were jettisoning weight as you walked/rode to conserve energy.