Fragmentary writings found around 1891 C.E. in an early Triassic stratum of a gravel pit near Eltdown, U.S.A., by Doctors Dalton and Woodford and sent to an obscure Midwest museum at Baloin University, where they were kept locked away. A man named Gordon Whitney was able to partially translate them up to the 19th Shard (of 23 shards) before his demise. These translations appear to have been published in book form in the 19th century, but only the Van der Heyl copy is known to exist of this edition. The 23 shards of iron-hard grey clay are all shapes, ranging from the Fifth Shard: an oblong piece about 4 by 8 inches; to the fourteenth: a jagged, roughly triangular tablet nearly 20 inches across. Most of them were incomplete and some were mere fragments. The Nineteenth Shard is roughly 12 in
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http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org | 13 |