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Following a heavy rainfall on July 10, 1897, the sons (Harry, Chris, Verne, Clyde) of farmer John Dosch were checking for flood damage along the eastern branch of Mill Creek near the village of Boaz when they discovered some unusual bones sticking out of the creek bank where it had been partially
91:, attorney and member of the state legislature, negotiated the sale of the bones to the State of Wisconsin for fifty dollars. The skeleton, which is about two-thirds complete and missing its tusks, was reconstructed in 1915 by M. G. Mehl and G. M. Schwartz and is housed in the
103:, and scribbled on the envelope was "allegidly found with U.W. elephant". In 1962, the two surviving Dosch brothers identified the point as like the one they had found 66 years previously. The fluted spear point is made of quartzite from the
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The arrowhead did not accompany the bones when they were sent to the
University of Wisconsin. In the 1940s the University received an envelope containing a quartzite spear point. The return address on the envelope was D. C. L. Dosch,
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Although the mastodon on display at the
Geology Museum has long been presented as a complete individual, it was uncovered in 2015 that two bones from the Boaz mastodon were combined with many bones from a different individual, the
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washed away. The boys excavated the bones and displayed them by a hitching post near the road. The local mailman spread the word about the find and the following week stories about it appeared in the
87:. What was described as an arrowhead was found in clay near a rib. The bones were moved to the basement of the Dosch farmhouse. Later, Frank Burnham, a
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95:. It is estimated that the Boaz mastodon was eighteen feet long, stood nine and a quarter feet high, and weighed six to eight tons.
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Widga, Chris; Lengyel, Stacey N.; Saunders, Jeffrey; Hodgins, Gregory; Walker, J. Douglas; Wanamaker, Alan D. (2017).
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dates for both skeletons. It found the
Anderson Mills mastodon dated to 12,910 ± 150 calendar years
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spear point found near the Boaz mastodon suggests that humans hunted mastodons in southwestern
149:"Rediscovering the Anderson Mills Mastodon: a 19th Century Find from Grant County, Wisconsin"
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193:"The Boaz Mastodon: A Possible Association of Man and Mastodon in Wisconsin"
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203:(2). Maney Publishing, Midwest Archaeological Conference, Inc.: 163–177.
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Hopkins, Steve (June 25, 1989). "Ancient
Creatures Still Speak".
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Pease, Harry S. (July 30, 1978). "In Search of the
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342:Paleontology in Wisconsin
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64:Anderson Mills mastodon
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232:The Milwaukee Journal
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