According to Widipedia, the 6006 is the same as the 601, and it takes Nikkor F-Mount lenses.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_F-mount
You should read up on the F-mount lens article to learn about the possible limitations with using these lenses on a modern DSLR. In particular, you may have problems with using the lenses because the camera bodies communicate with the lenses to focus and set the aperture. You may also find that you wish you could take full advantage of your new cameras auto-focus and auto-exposure settings, rather than having to do all the settings manually. Most photographers today have found it frustrating to use old lenses with new digital bodies and prefer to sell their old kit (camera and lens) to a student or other photographer who is still playing with film, and put the sales money towards modern lenses.
The prior answer is backwards about how the crop sensor (which is only present on SOME DSLR models) works with a zoom lens. The 1.5 crop factor sensor on the body you are considering makes your lens act more telephoto (by a factor of 1.5), not less. Your wide-angle lenses will act more like a normal focal length, normal focal length acts lime a modest zoom, zoom lenses get zoomier, e.g. a 100mm lens will have the same field of view that a 150 has on a full-frame sensor. This is great if you shoot sport or wildlife, not so great if you like to shoot landscapes with wider-angle lenses. You can avoid these changes by getting a full-frame DSLR model instead.
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