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U.S. Bureau of Land Management Ranger

Albuquerque Field Office, New Mexico

2005 Ford Expedition

BLM Utah and the Utah State Historical Preservation Office worked together with volunteers to excavate at the historic Transcontinental Railroad site at Terrace, Utah in September 2020.

BLM employees participate in Tower Climbing Training. maintains about 600 antenna systems on towers or antenna support structures to provide 24/7 radio coverage for field going employees and cooperators. 5.Jason Becker prepares the practice dummy for rescue. Photo by BLM

Photos from an entirely peaceful Black Lives Matter protest in Bury St Edmunds

 

Jpusa BLM Weekly Vigil

Chicago , IL, USA

 

Metre Gauge Bergbahn Lauterbrunnen-Mürren funicular, Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland. 16 March 1989. This railway starts as a funicular, with a conventional section at the top of the funicular.

Employee submissions for 2015 photo contest. Photos taken from public land in Oregon and Washington.

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Credit: Roo Pitt - Concrete

BLM Firefighters on the Charcoal Gulch Pile Burn on BLM land in Idaho City, ID.

 

Photo by Joe Ritz, BLM

In the summer of 2016, the BLM Burns District continued its partnership with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History and the Oregon Archaeological Society and conducted archaeological excavations at the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter site in southeastern Oregon.

 

The site, discovered in 2009 by BLM Archaeologist Scott Thomas, has hosted archaeology field schools since 2011. In 2015, it became internationally known after archaeologists found a small stone tool under a layer of volcanic ash from a volcanic eruption about 15,800 years ago.

 

This tool suggests one of the oldest known human occupations in the western United States.

 

The 2016 excavations encountered significant rock and boulder debris, resulting from at least two occasions of portions of the rock wall calving or breaking off – probably around 8,000 and 10,000 years ago. These rocks limited access to the ground beneath them, and many were removed only after drilling and splitting reduced them to removeable sizes.

 

In coordination with the BLM’s Scott Thomas, Dr. Patrick O’Grady with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History directed excavations for the fifth year in 2016, and Jordan Pratt, graduate student at Texas A&M University, served as the excavation’s site supervisor. Volunteers from the Oregon Archaeological Society, students from the University of Oregon, and archaeologists from the BLM conducted the excavations.

 

Video by Greg Shine, BLM

The Pahrump Valley in the north, the Mesquite Valley in the southeast, and the California Valley in the west join forces in this desolate, seldom-visited Wilderness. Alluvial slopes in all three valleys ascend gradually southward into the northern Kingston Range, which also lies within the Wilderness. In the mountains, you'll find a rugged piece of earth with many canyons, winding washes, and bajadas. Elevations range from 2,720 feet on a valley floor to 4,569 feet on a mountain summit. The three dry valleys are dotted with desert shrubs and yucca. Wild burros are protected here, and you'll probably see a few of them, along with desert bighorn sheep, desert tortoises, and golden eagles. An old four-wheel-drive track crosses the area from northwest to southeast, and a long waterless way it is. The northeastern border is the Nevada state line. (Text coutesy of wilderness.net wilderness.net/visit-wilderness/?ID=437)

 

Photo by Jesse Pluim, BLM

Credit: Roo Pitt - Concrete

Black Lives Matter Silent March in Seattle

BLM Photo

 

URL: www.blm.gov/photos/netpub/server.np?find&catalog=cata... Office&op=starts with&value=Nevada&join=and&sorton=Cataloged&&template=details.np&offset=286

 

Filename: NVdollyvardenmtns4.jpg

This is a picture that I took when I go out for a walk. I saw this sign on the back of a car.

In my community, BLM is not a topic that people usually talk about. I didn't see any proofs that show if they support BLM or not. But my friends and I all agree that racism is a big problem in the society and we are not only support that Black Lives Matter but also All Lives Matter.

Cochiti Environmental Engineer Phoepe Suina, Acting BLM Albuquerque District Manager John Brenna, Cochiti Pueblo Lieutenant Governor Greg Suina, Deputy Secretary of the Interior Mike Conner, BLM New Mexico State Director Jesse Juen, Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument Manager Jackie Leyba, BLM Fire Management Specialist Todd Richards, BLM Fire Management Officer Hector Madrid, and BLM Fire Operations Specialist Dave Bott visit Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument.

Credit: Roo Pitt - Concrete

BLM employees participate in Tower Climbing Training. maintains about 600 antenna systems on towers or antenna support structures to provide 24/7 radio coverage for field going employees and cooperators. Jason Becker, a Bureau of Land Management telecommunications specialist at the National Interagency Fire Center and the instructor for the refresher training, secures his harness.Photo by BLM

Credit: Roo Pitt - Concrete

County route 34, along the north side of the Black Rock Desert.

 

For more photos from this trip see Lincoln2014 on Ipernity: www.ipernity.com/tag/donbrr/keyword/4118945

 

Even on warm spring day's, Alaska is chilly!

 

Photo by Robben Taylor, BLM.

BLM fire crews are taking care of tumbleweeds accumulating along roadsides which can become a hazard.

BLM employees participate in Tower Climbing Training. maintains about 600 antenna systems on towers or antenna support structures to provide 24/7 radio coverage for field going employees and cooperators. Telecommunications specialist Douglas Young with the BLM’s Color Country District scales the ladder.Photo by BLM

Credit: Roo Pitt - Concrete

In this panoramic photo of the #HotPotFire, one can see reddish areas where fire retardant was dropped by plane to slow fire spread. #BLMIFDFire

This is a picture I took of an expressive sign, that included BLM, when I was walking my dog in my home town neighborhood in a suburb near Dallas while I was here visiting for the weekend. I think I was more shocked that I saw it here because right across the street was a Trump sign. I feel like my neighborhood houses older people so it is not something that is so prevalent here to see or hear. In my immediate community, in Austin, I think it is more prevalent when it comes to speaking out about it because I live in West Campus surrounded by outspoken students.

Employee submissions for 2015 photo contest. Photos taken from public land in Oregon and Washington.

She stopped her car on the highway and jumped out, gesticulating wildly. I think she was thrilled to see us, but I'm not totally sure. I was mainly concerned she was going to cause an accident and that we would bear some responsibility for that.

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