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This is a classic outcrop in Appalachian stratigraphy. Overall, it shows the transition from the passive margin sedimentation (limestone) of the Cambrian and early Ordovician Sauk and Tippecanoe epeiric seas into the increasing clastic (sand and mud) influence of active margin sedimentation associated with the onset of...
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Located in the entrance hallway on the upper level of the Shuler Building (CS) on the Annandale campus of Northern Virginia Community College, this display highlights the diversity of the rock types in the greater-DC / mid-Atlantic area. This is the second of several attempts to gigapan the display, but auto-focus re...
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Located in the entrance hallway on the upper level of the Shuler Building (CS) on the Annandale campus of Northern Virginia Community College, this display highlights the diversity of the rock types in the greater-DC / mid-Atlantic area. This is the first of several attempts to gigapan the display, but auto-focus rend...
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- 394
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Windy Ridge is one of the best places to get an overview of the area devastated by the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The landscape is littered with sand and gray rocks from that event. Deposits of the debris avalanche are visible to the west. These include the lower parts of The Spillover, where the debris avalanc...
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- The Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument from the Johnston Ridge Observatory, Oct 21, 2010 by Gavin Farrell
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The Johnston Ridge Observatory sits on a bluff just 5-1/2 miles from the crater at an elevation of 4,314'/1,327m and offers grand views of Mount St. Helens and much of the 1980 blast zone. Here you can enjoy spectacular views of the lava dome, crater, pumice plain and the landslide deposit.
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This is a view on Sunday, April 10, at about 10am, to the valley north of Old Rag Mountain, in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
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Perched nearly 1500 feet above the Linville River, Wiseman's View overlooks the deepest gorge in the eastern US. From this vantage point, not only do you get a magnificent view of the rugged Linville Gorge, but you also get a commanding view of Hawksbill Mountain and Table Rock.
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Perched nearly 1500 feet above the Linville River, Wiseman's View overlooks the deepest gorge in the eastern US. From this vantage point, not only do you get a magnificent view of the rugged Linville Gorge, but you also get a commanding view of Hawksbill Mountain and Table Rock.
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Walker Ridge looking West over Indian Reservoir. Snow mountain is visible to the North.
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