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SOME POINTERS:
Photos typically include their locations, so you can use locations as keywords too. You get more hits with shorter words, and fewer hits as you become increasingly specific with increasing numbers of keywords. It’s best to use singular rather than plural (eg “volcano” instead of “volcanoes”).
As some words are included in others (“salt” within “basalt,” for example) you might want to be more specific to avoid getting a bunch of irrelevant photos.
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Recumbent syncline, northern Montana
Recumbent syncline in the hangingwall of the Lewis Thrust, east edge of Glacier National Park, northern Montana (2K7Glac-61)
Download ImageDuststorm, Mojave Desert, SE California
Dust storm in the Mojave Desert of SE California. (2K7DV-181)
Download ImageDesert Pavement, Mojave Desert, Cal
Desert Pavement and Eagle Mountain, Amargosa Valley, Mojave Desert, California (2K7DV-174)
Download ImageDesert Pavement, Mojave Desert, Cal
Desert Pavement and Eagle Mountain, Amargosa Valley, Mojave Desert, California (2K7DV-168)
Download ImageFolded gneiss, Death Valley, California.
Folded gneiss with Death Valley salt pan in background, Death Valley, California. (2K7DV-153)
Download ImageFolded mylonitic gneiss (vertical)
Folded mylonitic gneiss, Death Valley, California. (2K7DV-151)
Download ImageFolded mylonitic gneiss
Folded mylonitic gneiss, Death Valley, California. (2K7DV-150)
Download ImageFolded mylonitic gneiss
Folded mylonitic gneiss, hammer for scale. Death Valley, California. (2K7DV-146)
Download ImageFolded mylonitic gneiss
Folded mylonitic gneiss. Death Valley, California. (2K7DV-144)
Download ImageBasaltic dike intruding gneiss
Mafic (basaltic) dike intruding gneiss, Death Valley, California. Note the chilled margin. Hammer for scale. (2K7DV-143).
Download ImageBasaltic dike intruding gneiss (vertical)
Mafic (basaltic) dike intruding gneiss, Death Valley, California. Note the chilled margin. Hammer for scale. (2K7DV-142).
Download ImageBasaltic dike intruding gneiss (vertical)
mafic (basaltic) dike intruding gneiss and offset by a fault, Death Valley, California. Note the chilled margin. Hammer for scale. (2K7DV-141).
Download ImageFaulted basaltic dike intruding gneiss
mafic (basaltic) dike intruding gneiss and offset by a fault, Death Valley, California. Note the chilled margin. Hammer for scale. (2K7DV-140).
Download ImageNormal fault and tilted rock, W Nevada
Aerial view of a low-angle normal fault and tilted Paleozoic sedimentary rock in its hanging wall. Bare Mountain, Nevada (2K7DV-13)
Download ImagePleistocene fanglomerate (vertical)
Slot canyon eroded into Pleistocene alluvial fan deposits (fanglomerate). Death Valley, California (2765-100) erosion
Download ImageDifferential erosion of sandstone (vertical)
Differential weathering and erosion of Permian Cedar Mesa Sandstone into a “mushroom” rock Canyonlands, Utah. (2K5-2813)
Download ImageEolian cross-bedded sandstone, Utah
Eolian cross-stratification in Permian Cedar Mesa Sandstone, Canyonlands, Utah (2K5-2779) aeolian
Download ImageCross-bedded sandstone, Utah
Permian-age Eolian cross-bedded Cedar Mesa Sandstone, Canyonlands National Park, Utah (2K5-2771)
Download ImageWater-filled pothole in sandstone, Utah
Water-filled pothole in Permian Cedar Mesa Sandstone, Canyonlands, Utah (2K5-2767) weathering, erosion
Download ImageErosion of sandstone, Utah
Permian Cedar Mesa Sandstone eroded into rounded caprock and where controlled by closely spaced joints, pinnacles, Canyonlands, Utah (2K5-2764)
Download ImageCross-bedded sandstone, Utah (Pan)
Cross-bedded Eolian Permian Cedar Mesa Sandstone eroded into rounded caprock and where controlled by closely spaced joints, pinnacles, Canyonlands, Utah (2K5-2762)
Download Image
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