Box 5
Contains 11 Results:
Volcanic Rocks, 1957-1958
Correspondence and notes.
Wahweap Gravels, 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.
Wasatch Region, Manuscript, 1949
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.
Waste Disposal
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.
Water Resources, 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.
Western Cordillera, 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.
Western Oil Shale, 1970-1971
Correspondence.
Wetlands, 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.
Zion, Bryce, Cedar Breaks, Capitol Reef, 1968
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.
Zion National Park, 1965-1969
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.
Miscellaneous, 1959-1972
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.