View allAll Photos Tagged springcreek

Ctenophorus isolepis. Spring Creek, Mount Isa, QLD.

Colorado Springs, CO - After a day full of chores and errands it's nice to kick back and watch the sun cast it's magical light into the sky.

Original Caption: Workers at Site of Controversial Landfill Operation on Jamaica Bay 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5500

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547987

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

Ctenophorus isolepis. Spring Creek, Mount Isa, QLD.

West Brown's Cascade is a waterfall that originates from natural spring water in the ground (near the top of the photo).

One of 9 visits to West Brown's Cascade since early 2009.

Built circa 1920, the stone Spring Creek School stands in the flats of Spring Creek. When the school was built, Highway 209 had not yet been paved, and the area remained very isolated until the 1950s. The one-story building consists of two wings of classrooms arranged in a linear fashion on either side of a large multipurpose room with arched windows. In the 1950s, a cafeteria building of identical design to the one at the nearby Fines Creek School in Haywood County and several schools in other parts of the region was built behind the building. The building was at one point home to a small high school program until Madison County High School opened in 1974, consolidating the various high school programs that existed in various parts of the county. The building continued to educate the children of the remote Spring Creek Township at the middle school and elementary school grade levels until 1989, when it was consolidated with Hot Springs Elementary School due to declining enrollment. After falling into disrepair, the building was renovated for adaptive reuse in the early 2000s, and is now home to a community center, several small business operations, and Dave’s 209 Cafe.

Historic two-span concrete ribbed spandrel arch bridge on Belotes Ferry Road over Spring Creek in Wilson County, Tennessee. Designed and built by the Luten Bridge Company in 1927.

Built circa 1920, the stone Spring Creek School stands in the flats of Spring Creek. When the school was built, Highway 209 had not yet been paved, and the area remained very isolated until the 1950s. The one-story building consists of two wings of classrooms arranged in a linear fashion on either side of a large multipurpose room with arched windows. In the 1950s, a cafeteria building of identical design to the one at the nearby Fines Creek School in Haywood County and several schools in other parts of the region was built behind the building. The building was at one point home to a small high school program until Madison County High School opened in 1974, consolidating the various high school programs that existed in various parts of the county. The building continued to educate the children of the remote Spring Creek Township at the middle school and elementary school grade levels until 1989, when it was consolidated with Hot Springs Elementary School due to declining enrollment. After falling into disrepair, the building was renovated for adaptive reuse in the early 2000s, and is now home to a community center, several small business operations, and Dave’s 209 Cafe.

The first, two-room portion of this house was built initially during reconstruction, in the 1860s, was expanded after coming under the ownership of the Meadows family circa 1910. The family, which had 12 children, necessitated the expansion of the structure, funded by the operation by the family of an adjacent general store, now gone. The building served as lodging for travelers from as far away as Europe during the Great Depression, and was recently restored by descendants of the Meadows family, though the store vanished due to decades of neglect. The adjacent barn is presently in poor shape, with several structural elements missing.

Fishing DePuy spring creek with Brian Ramsey, guide and friend.

Original Caption: Men Hunt for Scrap Metal in Debris of Landfill Operation on Jamaica Bay 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5495

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547982

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

20160705-JCB_2877 - Lamoille Canyon TH - Lamoille Lake, ELK (NV)

Built circa 1920, the stone Spring Creek School stands in the flats of Spring Creek. When the school was built, Highway 209 had not yet been paved, and the area remained very isolated until the 1950s. The one-story building consists of two wings of classrooms arranged in a linear fashion on either side of a large multipurpose room with arched windows. In the 1950s, a cafeteria building of identical design to the one at the nearby Fines Creek School in Haywood County and several schools in other parts of the region was built behind the building. The building was at one point home to a small high school program until Madison County High School opened in 1974, consolidating the various high school programs that existed in various parts of the county. The building continued to educate the children of the remote Spring Creek Township at the middle school and elementary school grade levels until 1989, when it was consolidated with Hot Springs Elementary School due to declining enrollment. After falling into disrepair, the building was renovated for adaptive reuse in the early 2000s, and is now home to a community center, several small business operations, and Dave’s 209 Cafe.

HDR 7 exposure

 

This is the Spring creek stream in Marlborough New Zealand, Its a very good trout fishing stream with many large fish some in double figures, I have caught the odd onehere on the fly rod,Many fishermen catch more trees here than fish, If it was a easy stream to fish then there wouldn't be the big trout here aye.

"THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to put amongst their "FAVES".

"THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to leave a "Comment", I'll do my very best to reply to you individually.

 

Original Caption: Aeration Tanks Under Construction at the New Spring Creek Water Pollution Control Plant 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5469

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547956

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

Original Caption: Dump Truck Enters Landfill Area at Spring Creek, on Jamaica Bay. Landfill Operation Is Being Conducted by the City of New York Environmentalists Fear Ecological Consequences 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5492

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547979

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

Built circa 1920, the stone Spring Creek School stands in the flats of Spring Creek. When the school was built, Highway 209 had not yet been paved, and the area remained very isolated until the 1950s. The one-story building consists of two wings of classrooms arranged in a linear fashion on either side of a large multipurpose room with arched windows. In the 1950s, a cafeteria building of identical design to the one at the nearby Fines Creek School in Haywood County and several schools in other parts of the region was built behind the building. The building was at one point home to a small high school program until Madison County High School opened in 1974, consolidating the various high school programs that existed in various parts of the county. The building continued to educate the children of the remote Spring Creek Township at the middle school and elementary school grade levels until 1989, when it was consolidated with Hot Springs Elementary School due to declining enrollment. After falling into disrepair, the building was renovated for adaptive reuse in the early 2000s, and is now home to a community center, several small business operations, and Dave’s 209 Cafe.

This was taken in the heavy rain time a couple of weeks ago. The water is discoloured because of the erosion the heavy rain causes. There is quite a long drop as this creek flows off the buttress ranges into Barron Gorge.

 

Here is somehting sent to me today from the place where I just bought my new digital camera -

 

11th March earthquake in Japan shocked the world, followed by the tsunami disaster, and the unfolding nuclear power plant situation even more intensified.

 

For technology enthusiasts, the more immediate concern is the effect this will have on camera and mobile product supplies. It is understood, Nikon, Canon, Sigma, Sony and other manufacturers plants and equipments have suffered varying levels of damage, due to the earthquake or power outages.

  

Canon - Earthquake so that the plant is located in Utsunomiya roof of a building collapse, so that the plant was forced to stop production of the lens. In addition, the inkjet printer in Fukushima City, the production line, in Ibaraki Prefecture and optical coating production fluorite chemical plants are also subject to damage and are expected to take several days to ten days to recover.

   

Nikon - Destruction plant in Sendai, the plant mainly for D3 Series, D700, F6 SLR such as the flagship production base, while the lens is located in Tochigi Prefecture, and semiconductor production lines are also subject to damage.

   

Sony - Its six in the Miyagi Prefecture and Fukushima Prefecture plant after the earthquake shut down production facilities, Sony Chemical and Information Device Group Tagajo factory by the tsunami direct impact damage, temporarily unable to estimate the plant resume operations of the time, the affected plant is mainly responsible for Semiconductor, lithium-ion rechargeable battery, IC cards, magnetic tape, Blu-ray Disc and other parts of the production.

   

Sigma - Fukushima production base because there is no electricity supply, production is temporarily stopped, but fortunately no people were injured.

 

Located at Spring Creek in the Main Range National Park

Merops ornatus. Spear Creek, Mount Isa, QLD.

Reproduced 35mm Slide

Photo shot by my Dad, Jay Thomson, at Reliance, TN in April 1986

 

On April 26, 1986 Dad shot SBD F3Au 116 (ex-SBD 800, nee-CRR 800, to CSX 116) crossing the Spring Creek bridge near Reliance, Tennessee.

I went to go photograph Yuba River Falls with fellow flickrite Dave Cross (buffdawgus). I had thought about low water flow this time of year with little rain so far, which turned out to be okay. I totally missed on my guess where the sun would be, though. When we arrived the sun was already shining bright on the falls. So, as we headed back up the trail Dave spotted these cascades above the falls. The morning ended on a better note than it seemed it would as we left the falls.

Etheostoma coosae

Coosa Darter, male

Spring Creek (Coosa-Tallapoosa Basin), Chattooga Co., GA

21 January 2017

Photo by Alan Cressler

Flowing from the principal spring at Maramec Spring Park, Missouri. This area was formerly an iron works, using hematite iron ore mined nearby to produce kettles, plows, and other utensils used by the early settlers. The strong flow of water from the spring was used to power the mill's machinery. That water flow is now used by the Missouri Department of Conservation to produce large numbers of rainbow trout for anglers elsewhere in the park. The aquamarine color of the water is due to dissolved limestone.

 

This is 13 images stitched together to form this panorama of the valley below on a perfect fall day. Go here to view it larger :

 

www.flickr.com/photos/cavertim/6292829783/sizes/o

  

Amongst the crumbled shale, and random shaped boulders strewn at the bottom of this cliff at Seven Mile Creek, was a perfect square block that had eroded away to create this striking natural sculpture. So brittle & fragile is this mudstone, that this will all be gone after a few days of heavy rain.

Borough of Bellefonte, Centre County.

20160706-JCB_3043 - Lamoille Canyon TH - Lamoille Lake, ELK (NV)

perhaps we will find the tea house*

 

love to you, dear friends!!

joy to you, dear travelers!!

 

(photo taken in the cuyahoga valley national park, at spring creek on the way to blue hen falls.)

Located inside and adjacent to the Cascade Siskiyou National Monument and the Soda Mountain Wilderness, Jenny Creek is located in southwestern Oregon and is a tributary to the Klamath River. Jenny Creek is located in an area of exceptionally high biodiversity, and its watershed represents the geographic intersection of the High Cascade, Cascade Foothills and Klamath Mountain ecoregions. Jenny Creek also offers significant outdoor activities, including: fishing, camping, hiking, and kayaking. The area has a rich cultural history and long traditions of human use. A section of the historic Applegate Trail passing though the designated river corridor was added as part of the California National Historic Trail in 1992. The fishery and historic values were described by the BLM in its eligibility study dating back to the early 1990s.

 

Know Before You Go:

 

•Use caution when exploring along the creek; there are rock outcrops, slippery rocks, steep canyons, waterfalls, and cold, swift water during the winter and spring.

•Rattlesnakes and ticks are common in the warmer months.

•Access is along remote unpaved road systems that may be snow covered in winter.

•Southern portions of Jenny Creek are within the Soda Mt Wilderness area and are only accessible by foot or horse.

•Be aware of and respect private property in the area.

•Collect and remove any trash or waste; there is no garbage or toilet facility in the area.

 

Point of Interest:

 

Popular day-use recreational activities include dispersed camping, hiking, swimming and fishing. Jenny Creek contains redband trout and an endemic sucker, the Jenny Creek Sucker. Fall Creek contains redband trout. There is evidence of past wildfires in the area, including 2014’s Oregon Gulch Fire, which burned east of Jenny Creek and south of Hwy 66.

 

Location:

 

Travel East from Ashland, Oregon, or West from Klamath Falls, Oregon on Hwy 66. Turn South on Copco Road to access lower portions of Jenny Creek and Fall Creek. Several unmarked spur roads lead west to the wilderness boundary, past which you must hike short but steep pitches to the creek. Alternatively, turn north on Jenny Creek Road, approximately one mile east of Copco Road, and proceed north to access upper portions of Jenny Creek. Visitors are encouraged to consult a map, as there are numerous unmarked junctions. Keep to the west at all major junctions to cross Jenny Creek near Fredenburg Springs.

 

Contact:

 

Medford BLM

3040 Biddle Road

Medford, OR 97504

541-618-2200

BLM_OR_MD_Mail@blm.gov

 

Photo: Michael Campbell, BLM

  

Original Caption: City, State and Federal Funds Are Building a Water Pollution Control Plant in Spring Creek, Queens 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5389

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547876

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

Taken on 35mm colour film with Mamiya camera on October 3, 2006.

One of my 13 visits to Brown's Falls since 2004.

curlleaf mountain mahogany, Cercocarpus ledifolius var. intermontanus, Lamoille Canyon, Ruby Mountains, Humboldt Toiyabe National Forest, elevation 2310 m (7580 ft)

20160704-JCB_6978 - Thomas Canyon CG, ELK (NV)

Borough of Bellefonte, Centre County.

Original Caption: Pipes Are Laid at the New Water Pollution Control Plant on Jamaica Bay 05/1973

 

U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5462

 

Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-

 

Subjects:

New York (New York state, United States) inhabited place

Environmental Protection Agency

Project DOCUMERICA

 

Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547949

 

Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.

 

For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html

 

Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html

   

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted

Use Restrictions: Unrestricted

 

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