The University of Vermont

Imaging Earth's Surface

is a free, web-based, archive of photographs useful for teaching Geomorphology, the study of Earth's dynamic surface. Proctor, Vermont after flood of record, 1927

Imaging Earth's Surface

IN DEVELOPMENT - KEEP CHECKING BACK.

Teaching Geomorphology? You've come to the right place to find images.

During 2009, we will be filling this archive with images of Earth's dynamic surface. This new archive is supported by NSF CCLI and functions as an educational and pedagogical supplement for Geomorphology in general as well as specifically for the new Geomorphology textbook, Key Concepts in Geomorphology.

Imaging Earth's Surface contains high-resolution images of Earth's surface drawn from public domain sources as well as from members of the Geomorphology community. Image sources include archives of the US Geologic Survey, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency, the Geological Survey of Canada, and the Library of Congress photographic archive. Additionally, images come from the Geomorphology community at large and from the personal image files of Paul Bierman and Dave Montgomery.

You can find many other images depicting surface processes in Vermont at the Landscape Change Program website.

Last modified May 14 2009 12:04 PM

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