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Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Typical appearance of the Motagua fault rupture that caused the destructive earthquake. Earthquake Information Bulletin, v. 8, no. 3., p. 7.
The Caribbean region is part of World Energy Assessment region 6 (Central and South America). A fundamental task in the assessment is to map the locations and type of production for existing oil and gas fields. The Petroconsultants database is the only available database that has coverage for the Caribbean region. Oil and gas field symbols represent field center-points and are published with permission from Petroconsultants International Data Corporation, 2002 database.
Categories: Data, pre-SM502.8; Types: Downloadable, Map Service, OGC WFS Layer, OGC WMS Layer, Shapefile; Tags: AG, AI, AN, AW, Anguilla, All tags...
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Album caption: Jungle area east of Sabana el Cenote. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: This man is delivering "fresh" meat and the boy is carrying water from the lake. Some houses have a tin roof to catch rainwater. Drinking water is boiled. Sanitary conditions leave much to be desired. Generally the locals are healthy. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: The east end of the southern arm of Lake Peten. Flores is in the right center. Isla Hospital is in the left center. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: Stela F. One of the most distinctive of the stela at Quirigua. It projects 24 feet above the ground. This is the south face and the glyphs are perhaps the most beautifully carved of any among the Maya inscriptions. An unusual feature of this stela is that it has two dates - A.D. 1761 and A.D. 724 which is likely a leap year correction. While Stela F. is one of the tallest here it is not the tallest. Stela E. is the tallest. It is 35 feet long by 5 feet wide and 4 feet thick. It projects 26 feet 6 inches above ground and weights 65 tons. It is the largest piece of stone every quarried by the Maya. Guatemala. 1922. No index card. The Ruins of Quirigua, Guatemala - This Maya archeological site is...
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Album caption: A jaguar killed by the survey party on Candelaria Peninsula. The houses on the far shore are on Tayasal Peninsula. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: Typical forest cover around Laguna de Pentenxil. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: This marimba was made in Flores entirely of native wood. In some villages the sound boxes are made of gourds of various sizes. These musicians play for local dances and celebrations of any kind. They lived near my house and it was always a pleasure to hear them play. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: Looking east up the south arm of Lake Peten from the plaza in Flores. Guatemala. 1923. No album caption.
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Album caption: Trees felled at Ixlu a Maya site at the east end of Lake Peten so that the antenna for receiving time signals for determining longitude could be strung between tall trees. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: Lake Eckixil is partly obscured by forest. The clearning in the center of this photograph is an Indian's milpa. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: A sabana on Candelaria Peninsula northwest of Flores. It is a natural feature south and west of the lake. Guatemala. 1923. No album caption
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Album caption: Tayasal Peninsula as seen from Flores. The high points are Maya ruins. It is believed that they occupied this site as early as the 5th century A.D. Hernando Cortez was the first Spaniard, 1525, to visit the area. Padres Fuensalida and Orbita in 1618 were the first missionaries to try to Christianize the Maya. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Album caption: The Catholilc church on the Plaza in Flores. It was built in 1718 only 21 yars after the final conquest of the Maya by the Spanish at Tayasal in 1697. Guatemala. 1923. No index card.
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Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Eastward along the trace of the Motagua fault near Zacapa, showing deformation of a thin hard adobe surface soil due to 80 centimeters sinistral slip. Note the prominent development of en echelon fissures oriented at about a 15 degree angle to the fault trace and open 27 centimeters in the foreground with connecting pressure ridges to 40 centimeters high. 1976. Slide 12, U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 77-165.
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Guatemala Earthquake 1976. North along rows in a cultivated field west of El Progreso that are offset 105 centimeters in a sinistral sense by slip on the Motagua fault. The thick, saturated surficial unconsolidated deposits have yielded by plastic deformation rather than rupture. 1976. Slide 11, U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 77-165.
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Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Collapse of three spans of the Agua Caliente bridge on the road to the Atlantic Ocean. This bridge was constructed in 1959, and its loss, together with many landslides, cut the highway connection to the Atlantic. Several large railroad and highway bridges were badly damaged but did not collapse. 1976. Slide 47, U.S. Geological Survey Open- File Report 77-165.
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Album caption: Participants in the festival in San Benito to celebrate the defeat of the Moors in Spain b ythe Sapnish in the 15th century. Guatemala. 1923. Similar to photograph numbers 60 and 61 (kjo00060_BHG; kjo00061_BHG). No index card.
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Album caption: J.O. Kilmartin, topographer in Flores in March 1923. Guatemala. No index card.


map background search result map search result map Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Typical appearance of the Motagua fault rupture that caused the destructive earthquake. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. North along rows in a cultivated field west of El Progreso. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Eastward along the trace of the Motagua fault near Zacapa. Collapse of three spans of the Agua Caliente bridge on the road to the Atlantic Ocean. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Eighth century monument, Stela F, ancient Maya archaeological site of Quirigua. Rio Motagua Valley, Guatemala. 1922. Lake Peten. Guatemala. 1923. Lake Peten. Guatemala. 1923. Jerome O. Kilmartin, topographer. Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Festival in San Benito. Guatemala. 1923. Jaguar killed by survey party. Candelaria Peninsula, Guatemala. 1923. Trees felled at Ixlu a Maya site, Lake Penten. Guatemala. 1923. Tayasal Peninsula as seen from Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Forest cover around Laguna de Petenxil. Guatemala. 1923. Jungle area. Sabana el Centoe, Guatemala. 1923. Lake Eckixil. Guatemala. 1923. A sabana on Candelaria Peninsula. Guatemala. 1923. Catholic church in Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Residents of Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Musicians playing a marimba. Flores, Guatemala. 1923. Oil and Gas Fields of the Caribbean Region, 2004 (fld6bg) Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Typical appearance of the Motagua fault rupture that caused the destructive earthquake. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. North along rows in a cultivated field west of El Progreso. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Eastward along the trace of the Motagua fault near Zacapa. Collapse of three spans of the Agua Caliente bridge on the road to the Atlantic Ocean. Guatemala Earthquake 1976. Eighth century monument, Stela F, ancient Maya archaeological site of Quirigua. Rio Motagua Valley, Guatemala. 1922. Lake Peten. Guatemala. 1923. Lake Peten. Guatemala. 1923. Jerome O. Kilmartin, topographer. Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Festival in San Benito. Guatemala. 1923. Jaguar killed by survey party. Candelaria Peninsula, Guatemala. 1923. Trees felled at Ixlu a Maya site, Lake Penten. Guatemala. 1923. Tayasal Peninsula as seen from Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Forest cover around Laguna de Petenxil. Guatemala. 1923. Jungle area. Sabana el Centoe, Guatemala. 1923. Lake Eckixil. Guatemala. 1923. A sabana on Candelaria Peninsula. Guatemala. 1923. Catholic church in Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Residents of Flores. Guatemala. 1923. Musicians playing a marimba. Flores, Guatemala. 1923. Oil and Gas Fields of the Caribbean Region, 2004 (fld6bg)