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Album caption: Mt. Taylor and Mesozoics from near camp, Oct. 14, 14 miles N.W. of San Mateo, N.M., on Chaves Road, looking southeast. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Cabezon Peak in center and other lava plateau remnants, also upper Montana mesas, from camp Oct. 3, on Rio Puercao, from San Luis. Looking north. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Mt. Taylor and lava capped scarp from 8 miles W. of Grant, N.Mexico, looking northeast.1905. New Mexico. 1905. No index card available.
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Album caption: Chama River and Elvado Gap in Mesa Verde sandstone scarp to left, from 3 miles above Elvado, N.M., on Chama River, looking N. 70 degrees east. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Juratrias and Dakota, with overlying Benton and Montana coal groups in distance, from locality 83, 4 miles N. of Baca, N.M., looking N. 10 deg. W. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Lower Montana coal group at Tiejen Tunnel, 16 miles N. N.E. of Baca, N.M., from divide to S.E., looking north 15 degrees west. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Lava crested ridges underlain by sedimentaries, from Mt. Taylor, N.M., at 10,000 ft., looking S. 80 deg. E. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Juratrias, Dakota, and overlying Benton, and Montana coal bearing series, from locality 83, 4 miles N. of Baca, N.M., looking N. 30 degrees east. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Cretaceous sediments in distance, from Mt. Taylor, N.M., looking N. 25 degrees west. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Mesozoics on edge, from 9 miles S. of Sulphur Spring, N.M., on Gallup Fruitland Road, looking N. 60 deg. W. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Lava capped Chivato Mesa, and Mt. Taylor, N.M., from Dowie, N.M., 4 miles N. N.E. of Alesna Peak, looking S. 12 degrees W. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Showing E. and W. limbs and axial erosional of anticlinal fold in upper Montana Valley sediments, from locality 65, 7 miles N.E. of Alesna Peak, N.M., looking N. 5 degrees E. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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Album caption: Juratrias and Dakota, with overlying Benton and Montana coal groups in distance, from locality 83, 4 miles N. of Baca, N.M., looking N. 10 deg. W. New Mexico. n.d. No index card available.
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As the third largest federal land manager in the United States (Keystone Center 1996a), the Department of Defense (DoD) mandates the conservation and wise management of the natural resources on military installations. To this end, DoD policy directs each Army installation to produce an Integrated Natural Resource Management Plan (INRMP), the purpose of which is to “ensure that natural resource conservation measures and Army activities on mission land are integrated and consistent with federal stewardship requirements” (Army Goals and Implementing Guidance for Natural Resource Planning Level Surveys and Integrated Natural Resource Management Plans, 21 March 1997). The basic goal of this INRMP is to support and sustain...
The elk (Cervus canadensis) of the Jemez herd reside primarily in and around the Valles Caldera National Preserve, west of Los Alamos, NM and along the mesa tops to the north and west of the Valles Caldera. The area has experienced two wildfires, the stand replacing Las Conchas Fire and the mixed severity Thompson Ridge fire, within the last decade, burning a total of 180,555 acres. The data used in this report was collected to examine the responses of elk to these wildfires and forest restoration treatments. The Jemez herd is only partially migratory, with residents that consistently remain on the Valles Caldera and individuals that travel to the surrounding lower elevation slopes depending on the year and snowpack...
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The Crow Mesa Mule Deer Study was initiated in 2019 to identify the seasonal movement and distribution patterns of mule deer in the eastern half of Game Management Unit (GMU) 2C. This GPS study builds on nearby studies of mule deer and elk conducted by the Bureau of Land Management, the Southern Ute Tribe, the Jicarilla Apache Nation, and the New Mexico Department of Fish and Game. Migration corridors extended 20 to 75 miles from the winter ranges in GMU 2C to various summer ranges northeast to the Carson National Forest near Chama, and southeast to the San Pedro Parks Wilderness in the Santa Fe National Forest. The Crow Mesa herd relies largely on winter ranges administered by the Bureau of Land Management, where...
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Riparian ecosystems are valuable to the ecological and human communities that depend on them. Over the past century, they have been subject to shifting management practices to maximize human use and ecosystem services, creating a complex relationship between water policy, management, and the natural ecosystem. This has necessitated research on the spatial and temporal dynamics of riparian vegetation change. The San Acacia Reach of the Middle Rio Grande has experienced multiple management and river flow fluctuations, resulting in threats to its riparian and aquatic ecosystems. This research uses remote sensing data, GIS, a review of management decisions, and an assessment of climate to both quantify how riparian...
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This dataset provides lineaments remotely observed and interpreted on 1-m lidar data in northern New Mexico. Several types of lineaments were mapped, including scarps, vegetation contrasts, vegetation lineaments, tonal contrasts, tonal lineaments, and topographic lineaments. Some of these lineaments are interpreted to be Quaternary active faults whereas others are interpreted as older bedrock faults.
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There is a growing demand for commodities (elements, compounds, minerals) used in today's advanced technologies. Critical minerals are usually found in ore deposits that are deemed vital to economic and national security. The National Geochemical Database on Ore Deposits: Legacy data (NGDOD) contains chemistry and geologic information for nearly 30,000 historic ore and ore-related rock samples from mineral deposits and mining districts in the United States. Geochemical data sets from various mineral deposits were submitted by geologists of the "Systems Approach to Critical Minerals Inventory, Research, and Assessment" (SACM) within the U.S. Geological Survey Mineral Resource Program (MRP). The data sets represent...
Categories: Data; Types: Downloadable, Map Service, OGC WFS Layer, OGC WMS Layer, Shapefile; Tags: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Economic Geology, All tags...


map background search result map search result map White Sands Missile Range Integrated Natural Resource Management Plan Middle Rio Grande Multitemporal Land Cover Classifications - 1935, 1962, 1987, 1999, and 2014 Chama River and Elvado Gap. New Mexico. n.d. Cabezon Peak in center and other lava plateau remnants. New Mexico. n.d. Anticlinal fold in upper Montana Valley sediments. New Mexico. n.d. Lava capped Chivato Mesa. New Mexico. n.d. Lava crested ridges underlain by sedimentaries. New Mexico. n.d. Cretaceous sediments. New Mexico. n.d. Mount Taylor and Mesozoics. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias, Dakota, and overlying Benton and Montana coal bearing series. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias and Dakota. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias and Dakota. New Mexico. n.d. Lower Montana coal group at Tiejen Tunnel. New Mexico. n.d. Mesozoics on edge. New Mexico. n.d. Mount Taylor and lava capped scarp. New Mexico. 1905. National Geochemical Database on Ore Deposits: Legacy data Remotely mapped lineaments in north-central New Mexico Migration Corridors of Elk in the Jemez Herd in New Mexico New Mexico Mule Deer Crow Mesa/2C Routes Middle Rio Grande Multitemporal Land Cover Classifications - 1935, 1962, 1987, 1999, and 2014 Remotely mapped lineaments in north-central New Mexico Migration Corridors of Elk in the Jemez Herd in New Mexico White Sands Missile Range Integrated Natural Resource Management Plan New Mexico Mule Deer Crow Mesa/2C Routes Chama River and Elvado Gap. New Mexico. n.d. Cabezon Peak in center and other lava plateau remnants. New Mexico. n.d. Anticlinal fold in upper Montana Valley sediments. New Mexico. n.d. Lava capped Chivato Mesa. New Mexico. n.d. Lava crested ridges underlain by sedimentaries. New Mexico. n.d. Cretaceous sediments. New Mexico. n.d. Mount Taylor and Mesozoics. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias, Dakota, and overlying Benton and Montana coal bearing series. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias and Dakota. New Mexico. n.d. Juratrias and Dakota. New Mexico. n.d. Lower Montana coal group at Tiejen Tunnel. New Mexico. n.d. Mesozoics on edge. New Mexico. n.d. Mount Taylor and lava capped scarp. New Mexico. 1905. National Geochemical Database on Ore Deposits: Legacy data