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Haddonfield Hadrosaurus LbNA #9427

Owner:Silver Eagle Supporter Verified
Plant date:Jul 16, 2004
Location:
City:Haddonfield
County:Camden
State:New Jersey
Boxes:1
Found by: Two Hearts Joined
Last found:Nov 17, 2013
Status:FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
Last edited:Jan 9, 2016
Replaced container and log (09/01/08)
Terrain Difficulty: Easy (flat, 25 yards RT)
Status: reported missing (01/08/16)


SPECIAL THANKS TO CEOMEETING FOR REPLACING THE CONTAINER AND LOGBOOK.

In the summer of 1858, Victorian gentleman and fossil hobbyist William Parker Foulke was vacationing in Haddonfield, New Jersey, when he heard that twenty years previous, workers had found gigantic bones in a local marl pit. Foulke spent the late summer and fall directing a crew of hired diggers shin deep in gray slime and eventually found the bones of an animal larger than an elephant with structural features of both a lizard and a bird. Foulke had discovered the first nearly-complete skeleton of a dinosaur, an event that would rock the scientific world and forever change our view of natural history. The location of the Haddonfield Hadrosaurus site was lost until 1984 when boy scout Christopher Brees organized a project to find and mark it. Today, thanks to his work, the historic site is marked with a modest commemorative stone and a tiny landscaped park. So come see a part of history while looking for this microbox.

Directions:
Haddonfield is located about 10 miles east across the Delaware River from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hadrosaurus Park is located only a short distance from Haddonfield's main street, Kings Highway, at the end of Maple Avenue off Grove Street.

Clues:
From the rock plaque, turn left (north) and walk 13 steps to a large tree with small trees around it. Walk around it to the right to see a small tree growing just 1 foot away. The microbox is buried between this tree and the large one under a rock. Please re-cover well. NOTE: A geocacher found the box laying in the open and put in the following place: placed the container just behind the wood barrier corner to the right of the monument, safe and out of sight with a little regular (not poison) ivy over it.