Project Exploration Dinosaur Expedition 2000

Back to Home Page
Dinosaur Discoveries
Field Updates
Special Features
Photo Gallery
Team Interviews
Base Camp
Teacher Tent
About DE2K
Media & Press
Team Messages
Home Page
Go to Project Exploration

The Expedition: Out of the Desert.. cont'd


Rudd and Dave carry a folded tent through the maze of supplies in the compound yard in Agadez. With just two days to work, half the team loaded jackets while the other half inventoried expedition equipment and packed it for storage... for the next expedition.

When we left InAbangharit on November 22, we knew we had a big task in front of us: in addition to closing the open jackets from Camp 4, we were faced with loading all 274 plaster field jackets, 22 specimen boxes, and 3 tons of sediment in 100lb bags, onto a truck. We also had to inventory every piece of equipment and pack it for storage. The 48-hour bonanza (which included getting Dino a health certificate), was a blur of counting, taping and logging. With the exception of a toast over couscous late at night on the 23rd of November, Thanksgiving went by almost without notice, so preoccupied were we with the task of leaving Agadez.

All of this took place on the heels of a week of ferocious and clever excavating of the last great discovery - the huge sauropod. Faced with little time, and even less plaster, we excavated the animal but had to leave the jackets open after they were turned. They suffered the 100 mile piste drive to Agadez well and were quickly closed with the supplemental plaster Bido brought us from Niamey.


As Jack uses a pry bar to raise the jacket, Hans quickly slips a strap underneath. Next, the strap will be hooked onto a crane and the jacket will be hoisted 30 feet into the air - then lowered on to hte back of a truck for the next stint of the voyage: Agadez-Niamey.

The same crane that was put to work to erect Suchomimus back in September for the Flamme de la Paix, was put into action in our compound yard. Jacket after jacket was loaded, followed by specimen boxes (containing smaller, delicate fossils), and bag after bag of sediment.

While Eric, Hans, Jack and Greg working with the crane, the rest of the team worked to inventory and pack expedition supplies. Every tool, every extra bag of soup mix, every brush and every spoon was catalogued. We packed late into the night: two trailers, a water tank were hitched to Land Rovers, roof racks were strapped with rolls of burlap and white lawn chairs (37 and 15 respectively), and we paused only to watch two of the National Geographic documentaries about the 1997 expedition with the friends we made - and had worked with so closely over the last few months.

Alhassane Dine Dine "Bido" - our "Minister d'Connaisance," (Minister of Information), phlegmatic and humorous, our team member, driver, and translator and fixer.

Ibrahim Abambacho - our vertitable "godfather," who has, for the last ten years watched our backs, guided us through the ins-and-outs of Agadez, and even visited us once in the States.

Mohammed (a.k.a "Rambo is tired") - the whiz automechanic that kept our Land Rovers rolling all season.

Hima - jovial and charismatic, currently of the Adrar Madet tour agency and the up and coming premier chauffeur/guide of the region.

Ryouni - owner of the compound, co-organizer of the Cure Salee, and a towering figure (tall, that is) amongst the Touaregs of Agadez.


Suspended 30 feet off the ground, a 1000 pound jacket is carefully
lowered by crane into the truck that will carry it to Niamey.

Too, some of the guards who spent time with us in the field came and went throughout the evening, including Omar and Salle, to wish us luck, and say goodbye. As we drank lukewarm Fanta and Coke, and ate our last plate of couscous and tomato salad from the Targui restaurant, it seemed a fitting end to the fieldwork.

The expedition, however, was far from over, as we knew full well when we got up the next morning at 5:00am to continue the packing. Ahead of us: an 800-mile drive to Niamey, loading the cargo container and erecting Jobaria.

We departed Agadez with four heavily loaded trucks, (two pulling trailers), and Dino, unhappily in his kennel in the back of the Blue E truck, surrounded by boxes and cargo bags.


Moments after the accident the trailer has already been unloaded.
Despite Greg's attempts to bring the fishtailing trailer under control after a tire blew, the momentum of one and a half tons of gear packed insidemanaged to flip the truck.

About 90 miles outside of Agadez a tire on the White Tdi Land Rover blew a tire, sending the heavy trailer it was towing into a fishtail that turned the truck over. The truck was going slow by that point and, very probably, that is what enabled Jack and Greg to climb out of the vehicle relatively unhurt.

No broken bones, hardly a scrape or cut on the two of them, but within minutes Greg's shoulder started to swell and it was clear he would need to go to Agadez for an X-ray.

The team burst into action, first blocking the road in both directions with rocks and saw horses to deviate on-coming drivers.

Next


Written By Gabrielle Lyon - All Photographs by Mike Hettwer unless noted
Copyright © Project Exploration
Please send comments about this site to:
webmaster@projectexploration.org