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TitleCollection Number And NamePhoto Number
301 Huntington Research Farm, Emery County, Utah [120]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n09_07_129
302 Mobile transformer substation [1]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_001
303 Mobile transformer substation [2]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_002
304 Mobile transformer substation [3]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_003
305 Mobile transformer substation [4]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_004
306 Mobile transformer substation [5]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_005
307 Mobile transformer substation [6]P0206 Rocky Mountain Power Company Photograph CollectionP0206add2n10_18_006
308 Mike Masaoka, President Kennedy, and Munemori family: identification of people in photoP0544 Mike M. Masaoka Photograph CollectionP0544n02_03_001a
309 Manzanar Relocation Camp, 1942: information sheetP0544 Mike M. Masaoka Photograph CollectionP0544n02_07_003a
310 Tule Lake internment camp: information sheetP0544 Mike M. Masaoka Photograph CollectionP0544n02_07_004a
311 Plaque marking the place of Steptoe's Military Camp.P0617 Hope A. Hilton Photograph CollectionP0617n1_19_05
312 A geologic map of Utah, illustrates the strata conventionally colored differently according to geological age. Notice the San Rafael Swell, the dominant geologic and geographic feature in the eastcentral part of the State. The Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry (C-LDQ) is located on the northern end or nose of the Swell.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n002
313 This view of the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry (C-LDQ) in Emery County, Utah is typical of the primitive landscape and isolated areas, where many of Utah's dinosaurs are found and collected.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n003
314 These colorful, Morrison Formation exposures are similar to the rock outcrops where dinosaur bones are found in many localities across the Colorado Plateau of Utah, New Mexico, and Colorado.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n004
315 The Visitor Center at the C-LDQ, which became a United States Natural Landmark in 1968, has some interesting graphics that interpret and detail the operation and history of the Quarry. Included in the exhibits are some prepared, original dinosaur bones, and a mounted free- standing skeleton of a medium-sized Allosaur, which consists of less than 50% of the original, fossil bones. The skull of the Allosaur can be seen through the window in the front of the building.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n006
316 Interior of the C-LDQ Visitor's Center showing a dinosaur skeleton.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n006a
317 This is a view of the main interpretive exhibit, an Allosaurus, inside the Visitor Center at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry. The Center is open on a limited basis during the summer months and not at all for the rest of the year. The Quarry, Visitor Center, and picnic areas are supervised and maintained by the United States, Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management with the support and excavation at various times of the College of Eastern Utah, Prehistoric Museum, the Earth Science Museum at Brigham Young University, and the Utah Museum of Natural History.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n007
318 This oil painting by Utah artist, Gale Hammond, is his interpretation of dinosaur life at the Cleveland-Lloyd Quarry 147.5 million years ago. A large Allosaur looks on, while a second predator attacks a Camptosaur. Notice the vegetation and a ponderous sauropod dinosaur wading the shallow lake in the background. Few dinosaur Paleontologists now agree that sauropods spent much time swimming or wading, thereby risking getting mired in the mud of or adjacent to shallow bodies of water.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n008
319 Painting interpretation of dinosaur life.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048n009a
320 View from above, looking south(?).P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS01
321 Northerly view of quarry from Visitor Center.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS02
322 Close-up view of limestone cap, lying over the fossiliferous unit, which is approximately 1 meter in thickness.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS05
323 Another view of the limestone cap showing the undulating surface of the underlying fossiliferous, bentonitic shale.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS06
324 The left background may be very close to the original Princeton Quarry outline.P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS07
325 Prospect near the southern end of the Quarry in the vicinity of the Princeton Quarry(?).P1048 James H. Madsen Photograph CollectionP1048nGS08
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