93 results — topic: Archaeology & Cultural History
Comments on Colorado-Ute's request to WSC for a marketing services proposal
Ralph E. Clark III. October 31, 1985.
Heritage Resource Study Series for the Mount Emmons Project of Amax Inc., Gunnison County, Colorado - Vol. VI, Part II; the Historical Architecutre of Gunnison, Gunnison County, Colorado: a Review and Evaluation
Heritage Resource Series for the Mount Emmons Project of Amax Inc., Gunnison County Historic District, Gunnison County, Colorado. Volume VI Part I: the Crested Butte National Historic District, Gunnison County, Colorado, a Review and Evalu
Heritage Resource Study Series for the Mount Emmons Project of Amax, Inc., Gunnison County, Colorado - Vol. VI, Part 1; the Crested Butte National Historic District, Gunnison County, Colorado, a Review and Evaluation
Western Slope Energy Research Center 1980 Annual Report
In some ways 1980 has been a rather discouraging year. Colorado- Ute and ARCGo both disclosed plans for growth which would have considerable impact on Delta County. O11 Shale in the northwestern part of the state is rushing ahead. and the election results do not look promising for environmental caus
Natural Resource Plan: Planning and Management Region 10 Colorado- Appendix A Maps
Prepared through assistance of the US Soil Conservation Service Ute Lands RC&D Council. 1974.
Precambrian geology of the northern Sangre De Cristo Range, Chaffee, Fremont, and Saguache counties, Colorado
Precambrian metamorphic and igneous rocks, Paleozoic sedimentary rocks, and Tertiary igneous and sedimentary rocks crop out in the northern Sangre de Cristo Range. Miocene (?) age normal faults, Late Cretaceous or Early Tertiary thrust faults, and Paleozoic (?) reverse faults have displaced Precambr
Dikes of the McClure mountain — Iron mountain alkalic complex, Fremont county, Colorado, U.S.A.
The Fremont Butte, Washington Co., Colorado, Meteorite
Abstract The Fremont Butte meteorite was found near Fremont Butte, Colorado, in 1963. A single individual was found weighing 6.6 kg. It is an olivine‐hypersthene or L group chondrite showing brecciation and a small number of well formed chondrules and olivine phenocrysts.
Archeological Survey of Grizzly Ridge 1995: A Section 110 Planning Survey, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument, Montrose County, Colorado
Archeological survey in the Grizzly Ridge new-lands acquisition in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument recorded eight prehistoric archeological sites (5MN4504- 5MN4511) and twenty-four isolated finds (5MN4512-5MN4535). The survey was planned and implemented as a Section 110 of the Nat
Upper Colorado River Basin Cottonwood Monitoring Picture Locations .mpk
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin River Thalweg
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin River Sub-basins
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin Valley Centerline
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin Floodplain Land Cover
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin Floodplain Percent Cottonwood Cover
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Upper Colorado River Basin Cottonwood Monitoring Picture Locations
The Southern Rockies LCC is home to narrowleaf cottonwood (Populus angustifolia), common at elevations above 1800 m, and Fremont cottonwood [a common name regionally attached to the ecologically very similar Populus fremontii subsp. fremontii S. Watson and P. deltoides subsp. wislizenii (S. Watson)
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
Aqueous geochemical dynamics of metals and rare earth elements in an acid rock drainage-impacted alpine watershed
Numerous mountain watersheds in the Colorado Mineral Belt (CMB) are impacted by acid rock drainage (ARD) and acid mine drainage (AMD), which mobilize metals and rare earth elements (REEs) into surface waters. In the upper Roaring Fork watershed near Independence Pass, natural ARD from a highly miner
Archeological Survey of Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument and Archeological Inventory and Evaluation of Curecanti Recreation Area
The survey and research work conducted at Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Recreation Area and Curecanti Recreation Area are clear examples of how meagre beginnings can develop into a fruitful, long-range program designed on the one hand to meet National Park Service management needs, and on th
