Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Categories: Image (X) > Tags: {"scheme":"http://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/undefined/DenverHistoryPhotoLibrary/Collections"} (X) > partyWithName: Hunt, Charles Butler (X)

132 results (159ms)   

View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Tubular orifices in the fine sediments at Salt Springs near the north side of Borax Camp allow discharge of water to the valley floor. Light areas are accumulations of salts from previous discharges. Circa 1960. Figure 10, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 494-B.
thumbnail
Township 27 north, Range 2 east, Section 21. An echelon jointing in Dakota sandstone. Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Township 22 north, Range 1 west, southeast 1/4 Section 23. Erosion surface with coarse gravel deposit truncating overturned Lewis shale along west side of Nacimiento Mountains. Boulders are mostly granite. Sandoval County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Panorama with Image 294. Township 22 north, Range 1 east, southeast 1/4 Section 16. View northeast. Along Mesaverde scarp. Mancos valley with Dakota sandstone in hogback at right. Mesaverde in foreground. Hosta sandstone at base with coal bearing shale and sandstone above it. Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Burial mounds are numerous on the gravel fans near the Death Valley III and Death Valley IV sites. This was identified as a Death Valley IV mound; the Death Valley III ones are similar. Circa 1960.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Noonday Dolomite, showing structures of Scolithus tubes at the east foot of the mountain at the spur south of Galena Canyon. Circa 1960. Figure 9, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 494-A.
thumbnail
The Factory Butte Coal Mine, mining an 8-foot bed of coal, has a sandstone roof properly supported here with timbers. Wayne County, Utah. 1935.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Dowels set on terracettes showed virtually no movement in several years. The terracettes seem to be stable in the present climate. They probably formed at a time when the climate was wetter, as it must have been at the time of the Holocene lake on the floor of Death Valley. Circa 1960.
thumbnail
Old entry of the Factory Butte Coal Mine. The thin sandstone above the coal is topmost ferron. Upper Mancos shale forms most of the hill above the coal. The coal bad is 8 feet thick. Wayne County, Utah. 1935. Figure 18-A in U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 228. 1953.
thumbnail
Panorama with Image 420. View southwest and west from bench at Trachyte Ranch. Mount Pennell and Mount Hillers on skyline. The buttes are Morrison sandstone, the shale slopes below are Summerville. Trachyte Ranch in right foreground. Photo by M.I. Goldman. Garfield County, Utah. April, 1936.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Travertine deposits at dry springs along the Furnace Creek fault zone. Two levels of the travertine can be seen. The lower one (tl) drapes over the side of Furnace Creek Wash (foreground) and reaches the floor of the valley. The upper travertine (tu) forms the bench at the skyline in the center. Pre-pottery type projectile points were found on the travertine. Circa 1960. Figure 56, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 494-A. Sketch of portion of photo.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. West distributary of Salt Creek where it crosses the smooth silty rock to the flood plain in Cottonball Basin. This channel is 32 feet wide and 1 foot deep. Much of the efflorescence on the channel upstream from the pool is mirabilite, the hydrous sodium sulfate. Circa 1960.
thumbnail
Panorama with Image 295. Township 22 north, Range 1 east, southeast 1/4 Section 16. View northeast. Along Mesaverde scarp. Mancos valley with Dakota sandstone in hogback at right. Mesaverde in foreground. Hosta sandstone at base with coal bearing shale and sandstone above it. Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. 1933.
Categories: Image; Tags: Hunt Images, photo print
thumbnail
Township 22 north, Range 1 west, southwest 1/4 Section 11. Detail of bedding in sandstone near base of Wasatch. Sandoval County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Death Valley National Park, California. Wood post shattered by salt, an example of evaporation effects on the salt pan. This wood post, 3.5 feet long, was set in the flood plain of Salt Creek about 1910; ground level was at the lower edge of the bulge. Water rising in the wood evaporated at ground level and burst the wood with precipitated salts. Drawn by J.R. Stacy from photo, circa 1960. Figure 15, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 494-B.
thumbnail
Panorama with Image 280. Mesaverde, Mancos, and Dakota tilted vertical. Sandoval County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Panorama with Image 299. Township 23 north, Range 1 west. West 1/2 Section 26. View west. Stream in foreground flows to right and has beheaded stream flowing west in broad plain on the higher surface. Sandoval County, New Mexico. 1933.
thumbnail
Panorama with Images 444 and 445. View north from north side of Holmes. Mount Hillers with beds turned up vertically around its base. Pulpit Arch and Black Butte in center. Navajo capped plateau at right. In foreground the Wingate, Kayenta, and Navajo sandstone dip north off of Holmes. Erosion surfaces between Holmes and Hillers are cut across folded strata. Photo by M.I. Goldman. Garfield County, Utah. May, 1936.
thumbnail
Fragments of bioclastic "trilobite- trash" bed typical of the lower part of the Carrara Formation. The trilobites are olenellids. Death Valley National Park, California. Circa 1960. Figure 19, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 494-A.
thumbnail
Township 25 north, Range 1 east, northeast 1/4 Section 21. Detail of Upper Hosta sandstone (Basal Mesaverde). Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. 1933.


map background search result map search result map Death Valley National Park, California. Noonday Dolomite, showing structures of Scolithus tubes at the east foot of the mountain at the spur south of Galena Canyon.  Circa 1960. Fragments of bioclastic "trilobite- trash" bed typical of the lower part of the Carrara Formation. Death Valley National Park, California. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Tubular orifices in the fine sediments at Salt Springs near the north side of Borax Camp allow discharge of water to the valley floor.  Circa 1960. West distributary of Salt Creek. Death Valley National Park, California. 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Travertine deposits at dry springs along the Furnace Creek fault zone. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Dowels set on terracettes showed virtually no movement in several years. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Burial mounds are numerous on the gravel fans near the Death Valley III and Death Valley IV sites. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Noonday Dolomite, showing structures of Scolithus tubes at the east foot of the mountain at the spur south of Galena Canyon.  Circa 1960. Fragments of bioclastic "trilobite- trash" bed typical of the lower part of the Carrara Formation. Death Valley National Park, California. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Tubular orifices in the fine sediments at Salt Springs near the north side of Borax Camp allow discharge of water to the valley floor.  Circa 1960. West distributary of Salt Creek. Death Valley National Park, California. 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Travertine deposits at dry springs along the Furnace Creek fault zone. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Dowels set on terracettes showed virtually no movement in several years. Circa 1960. Death Valley National Park, California. Burial mounds are numerous on the gravel fans near the Death Valley III and Death Valley IV sites. Circa 1960.