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The Milwaukee museum already had skeletons of a mastodon and Chinese elephant. This is its first woolly mammoth. The mammoth is named for John and Theresa Hebior, who own the fields where the bones were found in the 1960s and excavated in 1994. For years the Hebiors tried to find a buyer for the fossils, but museums and universities were too cash-strapped to pay the six-figure asking price. Finally two Milwaukee benefactors, John J. Brander and Christine Rundblad, bought the fossils last year and donated them to the museum. John Hebior says they paid more than $100,000. The real bones are too fragile for display and are being preserved for research in Milwaukee. But a number of fiberglass replicas have been made. Besides the set unveiled Tuesday at the Milwaukee Public Museum, others are already on display in museums in Kenosha and elsewhere. ___ On the Net: Milwaukee Public Museum: http://www.mpm.edu/
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