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Jungle Trader (Free subscription) | 10/24/2009
NPR : Everett Ruess, legendary Utah explorer, writer and artist, has been missing for 75 years. Earlier this year, it seemed the cold case had been solved when human remains found in the Utah desert apparently tested positive as his. But doubts lingered, and now the mystery of the missing artist lives again. Previous: Utah
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Southern Rockies Nature Blog (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
New tests show a skeleton found in the Utah desert is not that of artist Everett Ruess. Last spring, I thought the mystery of his disappearance had been solved . Everett Ruess vanished in southern Utah in 1934, writing in a final letter to his family in California that "as to when I revisit civilization, it will not be soon" and "it is enough that I am surrounded...
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Physorg (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
(PhysOrg.com) -- A University of Colorado at Boulder analysis of a skeleton found in Utah that initially indicated the remains were likely that of Southwest artist and poet Everett Ruess, who mysteriously disappeared in the 1930s, now appears to have been incorrect.
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Sify (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
A skeleton found in the Utah wilderness last year was not that of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer of the 1930s, despite initial forensic tests that seemed to have solved an enduring mystery, his
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New West Network Cities: Idaho Nort (Free subscription) | 10/25/2009
Remains Found Near Comb Ridge, Utah Not Those of RuessThe Search ContinuesBy Christian Probasco, 10-25-09 Comb Ridge, Utah, lies 90 miles east of where Ruess was last seen alive. A new DNA test on remains found in a makeshift grave near Comb Ridge has disproved the possibility they belong to a famous young wanderer who vanished in Southern Utah in the thirties, according to a story by...
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One Utah (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
Some mysteries are better left unsolved. I wasn’t sure what to think when we were told that DNA evidence had identified an old skeleton found along Comb Wash as Everett Ruess. You have to sympathize with the family members who searched for an answer for so long. On the other hand, what [...]
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Sify (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
AP - A skeleton found in the Utah wilderness last year was not that of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer of the 1930s, despite initial forensic tests that seemed to have solved an enduring mystery, his nephew told The Associated Press.
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Examiner (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
A skeleton found in the Utah wilderness last year was not that of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer of the 1930s, despite initial forensic tests that seemed to have solved an enduring mystery, his nephew told The Associated Press.
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The Bu Element (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
after all: Remains Found in Utah Not Poet Everett Ruess . Hmm. The article is short on details so it's hard to know what to think about this 75 year-old mystery. Previous related post (a must read in light of this latest bit of news.) Hat tip: LS
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet.
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Salt Lake Tribune (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet. Last spring, the magazine National Geographic Adventure reported that what seemed like proof - based on a battery of genetic and forensic tests - that Ruess'
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Boston Globe (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet.
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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet.
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Kansas City Star (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet.
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 10/22/2009
The nephew of Everett Ruess, a legendary wanderer in the 1930s, says remains found in a Utah wilderness are not those of the famous poet.