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Sequoia National Park, California. Outwash material of the El Portal Stage, revealed in a road cut on the Generals Highway about half a mile above Ash Mountain Headquarters. Circa 1935. Figure 31, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
Sequoia National Park, California. Moro Rock, viewed from Hospital Rock. July 1935.
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Tags: California,
National Parks,
Sequoia National Park,
photo print
Sequoia National Park, California. Northwest from Mount Guyot. Kern Canyon extends from the center toward the lower left; three branch canyons unite at its head. Photo by C.F.J. Overhage. Figure 14, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
Sequoia National Park, California. Mount Ericson and Mount Stanford at the head of Kern Basin. Circa 1935.
Sequoia National Park, California. Gorge 50 feet deep cut by Wallace Creek, for the most part, in postglacial time. Stream erosion here has been facilitated by the numerous intersecting joints. Circa 1935. Figure 45, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park. Basin north of Goat Mountain, Sierra Nevada, from Kid Peak. Fresno County, California. (Panorama with photo no. 2467). 1904.
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Gilbert, G.K. Collection,
Kings Canyon National Park,
National Parks,
Photographers,
Remnant of sub summit plateau on spur extending west from Mount Whitney, Sequoia National Park, California. July 24, 1913. Plate 17-B, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 110. 1918.
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Tags: California Professional Paper 110,
National Parks,
Professional Papers,
Sequoia National Park,
photo print
Sequoia National Park, California. Farewell Gap, viewed from a point above Mineral King. Circa 1935.
Sequoia National Park, California. Farewell Gap, viewed from a point above Mineral King. Circa 1935.
Sequoia National Park, California. Chagoopa Falls, which descends the steep west wall of Kern Canyon from a small hanging valley on the Chagoopa Plateau. The side valley was left hanging primarily as the result of rapid trenching by the master stream, but its height was increased by glacial deepening of Kern Canyon. Widening of the canyon by glacial erosion also steepened the descent of the cascades. Photo by K. Flewelling. Figure 17, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
Sequoia National Park, California. One of the timbered moraines of the Wisconsin Stage that surround Moraine Lake. The meadow, which is below Moraine Lake, occupies a strip of level swampy land formed by the gradual filling of a lakelet that lay between the moraine in view and the next one to the right. Granite sand continues to be washed down from the flanking moraines, but the meadow is still too wet for growth of lodgepole pines. A few seedlings are beginning to invade it. Circa 1935. Figure 20, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
Sequoia National Park, California. Northeast from Boreal Plateau, overlooking the Siberian Outpost. In the distance is Mount LeConte. The nameless peak on the extreme left and Cirque Peak bear remnants of the Old Cirque Peak erosion surface. Mount Langley bears a large remnant of the still more ancient Whitney erosion surface. The vale with the pond (foreground) has been slightly modified by glacial action. Circa 1935.
Sequoia National Park, California. East face of Mount Hitchcock. The entire mountain has a vertically sheeted structure, and infiltration of water and consequent frost action are facilitated along the weaker zones. There the rock is split into thin plates and slivers; the fragments loosened by frost are then swept down by avalanches. These chutes stand in marked contrast to those shown in photo mfe01060, which are not controlled by fractures but are worn in massive granite. Circa 1935. Figure 50, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 504-A.
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Tags: California,
National parks,
Sequoia National Park,
photo print
Sequoia National Park, California. West across the canyon of Marble Fork Kaweah River, showing one of the great cliffs of white marble from which the stream takes its name. The cliff is cut from a vertical bed of marble transected by the canyon. To the left of the marble bed are thin beds of various dark-hued metamorphic rocks. All of these strata are the stubs of a huge fold that probably once rose to a height of several thousand feet, but whether the upper portion of the fold (anticline) lay to the right or left is unknown. Circa 1935.
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Tags: California,
National Parks,
Sequoia National Park,
photo print
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park. Mt. Huxley, Sierra Nevada, from the southwest. In foreground one of the Evolution Lakes. Fresno County, California. 1904.
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Tags: Fresno County, California,
Gilbert, G.K. Collection,
Kings Canyon National Park,
National Parks,
National Parks,
Sequoia National Park, California. 70-foot block of granite in the bed of the Kaweah River near Hospital Rock. 1935.
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Tags: California,
National Parks,
Sequoia National Park,
photo print
Sequoia National Park, California. Domes and pinnacles surrounding Hamilton Lake, viewed from the ridge above Redwood Meadow. 1935
Sequoia National Park, California. Lower lake of the Twin Lakes near Silliman Crest. Twin Peaks composed of exfoliating granite in the background. Photo by L. Eddy, 1925.
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