Monday, January 28, 2008

Your tax dollars at work (at last, for something useful!)

My current job occasionally involves a great deal of searching for public domain images to use in publications, and one of my favorite resources is the USGS Photographic Library. It's the online repository of a portion of the physical USGS photographic collection, which is absolutely massive. In their own words,

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Central Regional Library maintains a collection of over 400,000 photographs taken during geologic studies of the United States and its territories from 1868 to the present.

These images provide a visual history of the discovery, development, and sciences of the United States and its Geological Survey. Some photographs have been used in USGS publications, but most have never been published.

Currently, this website represents less than 10 percent of the Library's images with approximately 30,000 photographs on-line.
Some images are recent - there are collections from the Hawaii Volcano Observatory and the Mount St. Helens eruptions, for instance - but a number of amazing photos come 19th and early 20th century expeditions to the Western US, some of the earliest geologic expeditions in the history of the United States. There are also collections organized by National Park, historical earthquakes, mines and quarries, and photographers. It's a great resource, and even though a lot of the photos are black-and-white images, they're no less useful as teaching aids. Best of all, they're free: since the USGS is a government agency, anyone can use these images in any publication. They come in multiple sizes and resolutions (the largest is more than 1600 dpi, which is more than adequate for a professional publisher's needs).

Here are a few of my favorites:

"Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. Accumulated frozen spray about 4 meters thick from Africa Geyser in Norris Geyser Basin, melting mainly from the base upward due to high near-surface heat flow in Porcelain Basin. April 1979. Figure 61, U.S. Geological Survey Professional paper 1456. White, D.E." (wde00057)

"Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona. The Cinder Cone near the foot of Toroweap.U.S. Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain Region (Powell Survey). Stereoscopic view. Hillers, J.K." (hjk00905)

(Yes, that Powell. This is a spiffy image - if you cross your eyes at it, you can see the 3D view.)

"Splintered tree on Coldwater Ridge after May 18 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Geologist for scale. Skamania County, Washington. May 19, 1980. Lipman, P.W." (mlip0049)






"San Francisco, California, Earthquake April 18, 1906. Agassiz statue at Stanford University. April 1906. Mendenhall, W.C." (mwc00715)








"Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. 1969-1971 Mauna Ulu eruption of Kilauea Volcano. Mauna Ulu dome fountain (artesian type), 50 to 75 meters in height. Photo by J.B. Judd, October 11, 1969." (hvo00094)





If you're looking for lecture material, photos for a publication, or you just want to waste time drooling over pretty pictures, this is a great resource.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks...this will be quite useful. I love the comment "geologist for scale" My friends knew there was a use for majoring in geology.

Callan Bentley said...

Those are a bunch of friggin' cool images.

I got my image of the Clydesdale Fault in DC ( http://www.nvcc.edu/home/cbentley/dc_rocks/darton_fault_1_web.jpg ) from the USGS online archives, and then annotated it. The actual fault today is much more obscured through half a century of "protection" from the effects "of weathering and the small boy".

Julian said...

Those are some awesome photos!

I forsee that archives website being a prime procrastination tool for me this quarter...