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Sorry, I can't pinch photos from a published book. The example looks like yours, but with intact stamps.
The rifle is basically matching, but the bolt assembly is a mixture. This is not typical for a captured weapon for any regular army, as if a replacement or other captured bolt had been fitted, it would have been renumbered to match the rifle number.
This is probably a case of a rifle being confiscated after WWII, hence the erased Nazi-era stamps, and the person who handed it in may have deliberately "lost" the bolt, thinking "if I can't use it, no-one else is going to!"
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15 Attachment(s)
Here are a few more pictures of this particular rifle.
Attachment 36356
This is a close up of the star stamp on the front of the barrel. You can clearly see it covers another mark.
Attachment 36357
Here is the marking on the underside of the barrel. The following picture is also the barrel, close to where the handguard sits.
Attachment 36358
The following 3 are different views of the rear sight. Bottom part marked with K and S, top part marked with the rifle S/N and an S in the center.
Attachment 36359Attachment 36360Attachment 36361
Next few are various marks on the receiver:
Attachment 36365Attachment 36364Attachment 36363Attachment 36362Attachment 36366
And a few more of the stock itself: Note the 'barely there' Mauser banner on the left side of the stock and the H 2 (or P or 5) on the stock end.
Attachment 36369Attachment 36368Attachment 36367Attachment 36370
Previous one being again a close up of the star stamp, this time I believe over a WwA83, can't see it too clear in the picture though.
Anybody can read all those marks?