Query = 'min'

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Results from the Directory listing:

2002/Sep23  Tintic mining area. Digital.   

Results from the Photographs listing:

  #img_9250
Moore Road: gypsum mine, Red Ledges, Coal Cliffs (Molen Reef), cliffs of the Wasatch Pleatau above Ferron

  
  #img_8995
Old mine truck at the Cistern mine

  
  #img_8962
Dirty Devil mine, on Tomsich Butte

  
  #img_8938
Mine in a canyon south of the Lucky Strike

  
  #img_8934
Miniature canyonscape on the Reds Canyon road

  
  #img_8928
Inside one of the adits at the Lucky Strike Mine

  
  #img_8926
One-holer on the road to the Lucky Strike Mine

  
  #img_8771
More rainstorms coming up Reds Canyon

  
  #img_8749
The ford across Muddy Creek. The Hunt's drove this road in from a mining road to the south. Vehicles cross from the lower left to the upper left by way of the kiosk.

  
  #img_8373
Road into the Lucky Strike Mine

  
  #img_8372
Reds Canyon and Hondu Country, from above the Lucky Strike Mine

  
  #img_8371
The Lucky Strike Mine

  
  #img_8329
Mine of the west side of the Green Vein Mesa

  
  #img_8327
Mine in the Green Vein Mesa area

  
  #img_8236
Papilio indra minori

Approx. 12S 535311E 4312241N UTM (38 deg 57.53N 110 deg 35.61N), 6000 ft.  
  #img_8197
The bulk of the Swell that appears to be a point at Greasewood Canyon, as seen from the south of the Squeeze
Note the size of the Reef (formed by the Grand Canyon Group) relative to the interior of the Swell, made of the Perminan Group), a difference of 1700 feet
  
  #img_8193


Uneva Mine Canyon  
  #img_8192


Uneva Mine Canyon  
  #img_8187
Looking down out of Uneva Mine Canyon

  
  #img_8186
Swiss Cheese in Uneva Mine canyon

  
  #img_8184
Farther up the Uneva Mine canyon. Wingate sandstone on the walls, and Coconino sandstone making up the bulge of the Swell in the center.

  
  #img_8183
The Uneva Mine Canyon, second canyon south of I-70. Note the Navajo and Wingate formations, and in back, the Coconino sandstone, same formation that makes the Black Box.

  
  #img_8086
Cistern Mine, South of Bell Canyon

Behind the Reef road San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8070
Vanadium King Mine office

Temple Mountian San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8045
One of the main shafts, Lucky Strike Mine

Reds Canyon San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8044
Worker pegboard, Lucky Strike Mine

Reds Canyon San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8033
Green Vein Mesa mine?

North end of Reds Canyon San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8032
Green Vein Mesa mine?

North end of Reds Canyon San Rafael Swell 
  #img_8031
Green Vein Mesa mine?

North end of Reds Canyon San Rafael Swell 
  #img_7958
Truck, and Calf Mesa Mine in the background, upper left

San Rafael Swell  
  #480-3
admin and cascade peak Night, metered at 30 sec.

Ponds, SW corner  
  #img_7671
Black Dragon mine camp

  
  #img_7500
At the Dexter mine, Calf Mesa

  
  #img_5160
Penstemon (before blooming)

Cedar Mountain  
  #458-1
Window blind peak, bottleneck peak, assembly hall peak Turkey audible. Winter sun shines up valley/flats giving more even illumination and more dramatic angle.

along mex mt rd, 1/4 mile further along  
  #img_4661
The canyons of th enorthern San Rafael. Window Blind Peak is prominent.

  
  #453-2
pink cliffs, south side of the Paria overlook, Powell Point illuminated

Piracy point @ 7th turnout (big) =Farview point  
  #445-3
Assembly Hall Peak, East wall of Buckhorn Wash difficult to focus, 97% waning moon, Expose predicts 2 hrs exposure, my calc = 40 min. 39°404.605N 110°40.787W 5135f, wpt038

0.5 mile down corral rd, near San Rafael Bridge  
  #434-4
Aspen and pine stand, road in foreground 90 sec metered, 3 min actual

Nebo loop scenic drive  
  #117-1755_img
A boom town in the uranium-mining days ('60's and '70's), now barely a town at all.

 Cisco Utah
  #1708
Mine tailings in Sunshine Canyon, Utah. These were left by the Sunshine mine near 1900.

  
  #075-01
Ivy, Administration Building, SDSU

  
  #218-10
Tracks illuminated by the dawn, DM&E crossing 22nd Ave., Brookings SD.

 Brookings SD
  #1751
On I80 in Wyoming, a tree growing in a rock, supposedly planted by somebody famous.

  
  #1750
A tree growing in the rock, I80 in Wyoming

  
  #a012-06
This facility looks about 100 years old, and probably processed fluorspar (Na3AlF6) for the aluminum.

  
  #075-04
Ivy, Admin.

  
  #a101-34
In the Spring of 2001 the Big Sioux river in Eastern South Dakota flodded. This is taken after the river started coming down, about a week after the rains stopped

East side of town Egan South Dakota
  #v116-04


West of  Goshen UT
  #a012-08
This was a gravity-fed plant. I presume there is a mine above the plant.

  
  #1493

Owen Alun, minstrel.
  
  #n053-15

The Lord and Lady Heir of Northshield, Sir Saeric Scireham and Lady Yasamin al-Hadiyya
  
  #075-08
Ivy, Admin

  
  #062-30
Sky, clouds, and soybeans

Just across the border from South Dakots into Minnesota  
  Private photo not shown.  Please login on the Catalog page to view comments on private photos.
  Private photo not shown.  Please login on the Catalog page to view comments on private photos.
  #l127-26
Old mineworks.

 Goshen UT
  #honk
Honk for Service, old gas station and mine vehicle

 Eureka UT
  #2383
Minor towers, tower trail

Fisher Towers  
  #270-20
Part of the vast mud pan left by the diminishing Lake Jackson, Teton range in the background.

Teton N.P., North end  WY
  #270-22
The vast mud pan left by the diminishing Lake Jackson, Teton range in the background.

Teton N.P., North end  WY
  #272-2
Ore processing plant near Goshen

  
  #1821
Some shots form the old Iron or aluminum mill by Goshen.

  
  Private photo not shown.  Please login on the Catalog page to view comments on private photos.

Results from the Comments:

An anonymous visitor thought on 6/5/2006 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"thanks !!! reminds me of many times I camped there. thanks for the memories :)" 6390

Mike Davies of Salt Lake City thought on 11/11/2005 that this photo was good and added the following:
"My grandfather, who lived in Goshen, worked in this mine when it was in operation years ago. I never new exactly what kind of mine it was. Very nice photo of the mine." 2687

An anonymous visitor thought on 6/15/2005 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"Hi Bruce, the correct spelling of the plant is Lomatium junceum. As you may already know, it is the larval hostplant of the Papilio indra minori butterfly you shot. FYI. ~Todd" 3433

Wayne of Orem thought on 6/14/2005 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"Bruce, you did it! You have discovered a new population of Papilio indra minori. This is a very fresh specimen so it looks like the flight has just begun where you are. I guess this is the specimen you saw? There must be either Lomatium junceum, L. parryi or Cymopterus terebinthinus in the area for this fresh specimen to be there. Anxious to hear from you again. Keep up the great work! Wayne" 3327

Michael of Florida thought on 6/14/2005 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"Very nice shot here, kind of reminds me of some of the terrain I saw last year in Northern Iraq." 6173

Andrew thought on 2/25/2005 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"A sad reminder of the lost glory of the USA's railroad system." 5264

Rivi of Dubai - U.A.E. thought on 10/19/2004 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"This is another great shot. One question though, did you increase the saturation of blue? Hope you don't mind the question. I am an amateur trying very hard to learn. Rivi www.ajithrivi.blogspot.com" 5832

Benjamin J Wilson thought on 8/19/2004 that this photo was like, Wow, you know, totally mind-blowing and added the following:
"Hey Dr. Wilson, I had no idea that you were a photographer. This picture is awesome! Those clouds look like they were painted. Very good work. Thanks again for writting me a letter of evaluation, and preparing me for the DAT. So far on my practice DAT's I have got an 18 or better. See around this semester. Ben Wilson" 6865

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"this is not Opuntia polyacantha but rather O. basilaris, beavertail. Note that it doesn't have regular spines, just glochids, the fine barbed minature spines. The pads are bluer than O. polyacantha, and a different shape. The plant is more compact. Gorgeous photos! " 5069

Bruce Wilson of Provo, Utah thought on 2/23/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"I shot this about 10 minutes before sunrise from the balcony at Bryce Point. The haze is from a large fire burning about 20 miles to the north, which settled into the valleys during the still night." 7323

Theo Jacobs of The Netherlands (highest hill: 340 meter) thought on 3/14/2002 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"Hello Bruce, Following a link from the PhotoSig site I came on your site and enjoyed it very much. This, however, is a real masterpiece! One of the best photo's I've seen in months, especially the 'big' version. One small point though: the big version is lacking a bit in sharpness, I found that sharpening it makes it even more impressive, uncovering much more detail. Do you mind if I use it as my desktop? (Well, as a matter of fact I've already tried it and it looks great on my Iiyama 21 inch)" 6025

jack gilbert of Toronto thought on 3/13/2002 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"I love photographing God's creations, the flowers.I wonder why you have not decided to use a high end digital camera and Photoshop. This remarkable combination brought me back to photography. There is instant gratification in taking a photo ,downloading on computer,manipulating in photoshop and printing in minutes.See my flowers on www.photographybyjackgilbert.com.Having viewed many of your pics it is evident you are a superp photographer and I think you should employ this to a fuller degree in the digital world. Congratulations. JACK" 2966

An anonymous visitor thought on 11/5/2001 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"This really reminds me of old farms near where I grew up." 4364

eminem thought on 4/30/2001 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"I SEE IT!!!" 3907

Rebecca of SDSU at the moment thought on 4/27/2001 that this photo was 'interesting' and added the following:
"I like it, but I don't like the quotation marks around 'interesting.' I like the pic b/c it reminds me of home, with all the different colors of dirt and the way it's piled up in mountains with the sky behind it. Looks like home, I miss that..." 3907

Joe thought on 4/11/2001 that this photo was good and added the following:
"Framing is kind of wierd for a tree, but the colors and exposure are spot on!" 3069

Bruce Wilson thought on 4/7/2001 that this photo was 'interesting' and added the following:
"I've always liked this shot, even thought there is a focus problem, and a slight imbalance in the composition. The light that afternoon was perfect, though. Shot outside the Madison SD Prarie Village antique tractor pull and all-around good time, this was the preparation for the ploughing contest. The train in the mid-gound is an old Arco switcher (about 1000 HP) that pulled four cards full of passengers around the site. The silos in the background are a nice reminder we are in the prarie. The shot could be fixed had I waited another moment for the engine to move about eight more feet, creating a line from the silos, thrjought the cab of the engine, to the head of the farmer. And closing down the shutter would have fixed the focus problem. Maybe next time." 3136

Bruce Wilson thought on 4/7/2001 that this photo was okay and added the following:
"I guess by now you've seen I like the play of deep shadow on objects illuminated by the evening sun. This is an old road grader (used mostly for snow removal, I suspect). Some depth-of-field problems, but nice colors." 3471

Bruce Wilson thought on 4/7/2001 that this photo was good and added the following:
"South Dakota, due to the extremely flat land here, has the most wonderful evening light. Rich in color but still quite bright, the light just before sunset is the photographers 'majical 20 minutes'. Take a juned old tractor, wait for the light, and you get a pretty-good picture." 3418

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