Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek
- WOK 4-143
- Item
- 1956
Parte de W.O. Kupsch fonds
Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek in western Saskatchewan
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Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek
Parte de W.O. Kupsch fonds
Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek in western Saskatchewan
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Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek
Parte de W.O. Kupsch fonds
Slumping in valley of Swift Current Creek in western Saskatchewan
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"Alkali" salt flat near Cantuar, Saskatchewan
Parte de W.O. Kupsch fonds
"Alkali" salt flat at shore of a saline lake near Cantuar, Saskatchewan; note abundance of salt wort (Salicornia rubra).
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Geology - Research - Marilyn Truscott
Marilyn Truscott of Glidden, Saskatchewan, a PhD candidate in geological sciences at the University of Saskatchewan, makes use of an electron probe x-ray microanalyzer. Mrs. Truscott uses the machine to analyze samples of volcanic rock from the Sweetgrass Hills in Montana. She is obtaining information that will help provide a more complete picture of the geological history of the Western Plains.
Stalactites and Stalagmites - Montana
Parte de F.H. Edmunds fonds
View of stalactites and stalagmites in Lewis and Clark Caverns in Montana.
Bio/historical note: Frederic Harrison Edmunds was born in Hawarden, North Wales in 1898. He received his B.Sc. (1922) and MSc. (1923) from the University of Liverpool. In 1925 he came to Canada and joined the Department of Soils at the University of Saskatchewan. Professor Edmunds was named chairman of the Department of Geological Sciences in 1961, a position he held until his death in February, 1965.
Parte de F.H. Edmunds fonds
Aerial view of tephra cone strata volcano; location unknown.
Bio/historical note: Frederic Harrison Edmunds was born in Hawarden, North Wales in 1898. He received his B.Sc. (1922) and MSc. (1923) from the University of Liverpool. In 1925 he came to Canada and joined the Department of Soils at the University of Saskatchewan. Professor Edmunds was named chairman of the Department of Geological Sciences in 1961, a position he held until his death in February, 1965.
Parte de F.H. Edmunds fonds
View of hoodoo desert erosion in Monument Valley, Arizona. Note that hoodoos are 300 feet high.
Bio/historical note: Frederic Harrison Edmunds was born in Hawarden, North Wales in 1898. He received his B.Sc. (1922) and MSc. (1923) from the University of Liverpool. In 1925 he came to Canada and joined the Department of Soils at the University of Saskatchewan. Professor Edmunds was named chairman of the Department of Geological Sciences in 1961, a position he held until his death in February, 1965.
Stalactites and Stalagmites - Montana
Parte de F.H. Edmunds fonds
View of stalactites and stalagmites in the Lewis and Clark Caverns in Montana.
Bio/historical note: Frederic Harrison Edmunds was born in Hawarden, North Wales in 1898. He received his B.Sc. (1922) and MSc. (1923) from the University of Liverpool. In 1925 he came to Canada and joined the Department of Soils at the University of Saskatchewan. Professor Edmunds was named chairman of the Department of Geological Sciences in 1961, a position he held until his death in February, 1965.
The rock formation that gave Rockglen, Saskatchewan its name.
Parte de MJ General Photograph Collection
Photograph of the local rock formation which gave the town of Rockglen, Saskatchewan its name. It was later removed as it was considered dangerous.
Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
A path covered with fallen leaves is seen winding its way through a forest in autumn.
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Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
Four eggs of a Killdeer bird are seen in a nest made in the gravel and dirt.
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Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
A bloom in seed of Goatsbeard is seen through a group of Lupins.
A trail and bluff in early spring
Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
A dirt road is seen rounding a stand of trees on a bluff.
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Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
The North Saskatchewan River is seen cutting its way across the prairie from a hill above.
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River edge and 25th Street Bridge, Saskatoon
Parte de L.G. Saunders fonds
The South Saskatchewan River is seen flowing under the University Bridge on 25th Street from the river's edge in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
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