The jawbone of a US Marine Corps member killed during an aeroplane accident more than 70 years ago has finally been identified after it spent years as part of an Arizona boy’s rock collection.
More than 20 years after a mother found a human jawbone hidden in her son’s rock collection, genetic genealogy experts have unraveled the discovery and identified the partial remains of a US ...
Capt. Everett Leland Yager of the U.S. Marine Corps was 30 years old when he embarked on a military training exercise back in California in 1951, and it’s fair to say the World War II vet ...
This photo of Captain Everett Leland Yager appeared in the Palmyra Spectator newspaper 20 December 1944 (Ramapo College Investigative Genetic Genealogy Center) College students and one high school ...
A “rock” found in an Arizona child’s collection turned out to be the jawbone of a U.S. Marine who died in a 1951 training accident in another state, experts reported. Capt. Everett Leland ...
A jawbone of Capt. Everett Leland Yager, a U.S. Marine killed in a 1951 training accident, has been identified after being found in a child’s rock collection, experts say. Photo from Ramapo ...
A “rock” found in an Arizona child’s collection turned out to be the jawbone of a U.S. Marine who died in a 1951 training accident in another state, experts reported. Capt. Everett Leland Yager died ...