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As with all such finds, Burrer sent it to Professor Eberhard Fraas of the königliche Stuttgarter Naturalienkabinett.
From 1906 until 1914 when the quarry closed, Burrer donated the finds to paleontologist Professor Fraas of the königliche Stuttgarter Naturalienkabinett.
Material now known under Efraasia first came to light after Albert Burrer, Hofsteinmetzmeister ("Court master stonemason") at Maulbronn, in 1902 began to exploit the Weiße Steinbruch, a quarry near Pfaffenhofen in Württemberg.
In the Spring of 1909 at the Weiße Steinbruch, the quarry of Albert Burrer on the northern slopes of the Stromberg near Pfaffenheim in Württemberg, Germany, a fragmentary and poorly-preserved skeleton of a small dinosaur was found.