Atari Landfill

I have always found this story very interesting, and today some great news came about. I guess it may interest a few of you guys too.
For a quick summary, in the 80s during the video game crash, it was rumoured that Atari buried millions of dollars of products (game cartridges, consoles) in a landfill in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Most of it was rumoured to be ET cartridges, as it was such a bad selling game. It has always been a fairly good topic of discussion in the gaming community, mainly because no-one really knew if it had happened, and the air of mystery surrounding it.
Over the years, people have made small inroads into finding out what happened, finding information from small newspapers from the time, and performing scans of the land to see if anything was there. All that was confirmed was that Atari were there, but nothing more. A documentary team recently got permission to dig the landfill, and started digging earlier today. Already, they have managed to find intact ET and Centipede cartridges, and they think there is a lot more still in the landfill.
http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/26/5656288/construction-workers-unearth-legendary-cache-of-atari-games-in-new
For a quick summary, in the 80s during the video game crash, it was rumoured that Atari buried millions of dollars of products (game cartridges, consoles) in a landfill in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Most of it was rumoured to be ET cartridges, as it was such a bad selling game. It has always been a fairly good topic of discussion in the gaming community, mainly because no-one really knew if it had happened, and the air of mystery surrounding it.
Over the years, people have made small inroads into finding out what happened, finding information from small newspapers from the time, and performing scans of the land to see if anything was there. All that was confirmed was that Atari were there, but nothing more. A documentary team recently got permission to dig the landfill, and started digging earlier today. Already, they have managed to find intact ET and Centipede cartridges, and they think there is a lot more still in the landfill.
http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/26/5656288/construction-workers-unearth-legendary-cache-of-atari-games-in-new