Box 3
Contains 38 Results:
DDT, Mercury, etc., 1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Dams, 1971
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Degradable Materials, 1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Dillon, Montana, 1947-1948
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Driggs Anticline, 1949-1957
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Early Conservationists
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Earthquake Environment
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Ecology Problems, 1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Endangered Species Materials, 1971-1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Energy Crisis, 1971-1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Erosion of Zion Canyon, 1965
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Ethiopia-Sinclair, 1946-1947
Reports and correspondence.
Forests, Recreational Areas, and Wilderness
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Fruita Silver Prospects
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Fundamental Questions, 1971-1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Garland Pool, Wyoming, 1956
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Gas Hills Uranium
Airborne anomaly location maps, correspondence, and reports.
Geochemical Surveys, 1972
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Goshen, 1967
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.
Granite Creek Structure, 1945-1951
The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.