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         Astrogeology:     more books (76)
  1. Interagency Report: Astrogeology 54 - Preliminary Geologic Investigation of the Apollo 16 Landing Site by Apollo Field Geology Investigation Team, 1972
  2. Speculations in astro-geology by D Nicol, 1846
  3. Variations in surface roughness within Death Valley, California: Geologic evaluation of 25-cm wavelength radar images (Interagency report: Astrogeology) by Gerald Gene Schaber, 1975
  4. Distribution of ultramafic xenoliths at 12 North American sites (Interagency report : Astrogeology) by Howard Gordon Wilshire, 1972
  5. Structural Geology of the Henbury Meteorite Craters Norther Territory Australia Contributions to Astrogeology by Daniel Milton, 1968
  6. PLANETARY SCIENCE: An entry from Gale's <i>Science of Everyday Things</i>
  7. Shoemaker, Eugene: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Space Sciences</i> by Leonard David, 2002
  8. Martian meteorite's age reduced: but famous rock is still oldest known sample of Red Planet.(Atom & Cosmos): An article from: Science News by Lisa Grossman, 2010-05-08
  9. Planetary geology: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by David T., Jr. King, 2004
  10. Venus: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Space Sciences</i> by Larry S. Crumpler, 2002
  11. Postcards from the edge.: An article from: Science News for Kids by Ron Cowen, 2008-08-02
  12. Sleeping Fox Discovered in the West (Volume 1) by Michael J. Branham, 2010-10-30
  13. Mercury: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Space Sciences</i> by Robert G. Strom, 2002
  14. Martian water?(Notes from the Editors)(water on Mars ): An article from: The Mineralogical Record by Gale Reference Team, 2008-09-01

41. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES AND ASTROGEOLOGY (in MARION)
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES AND astrogeology. Records 1 to1 of 1. Fairbridge, Rhodes Whitmore, 1914 The encyclopedia of
http://vax.vmi.edu/MARION?T=ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES AND ASTROGEOLOG

42. Astrogeology Origin And Destiny Of The Earth Processing Declarative Knowledge In
astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth. astrogeology Origin and Destiny ofthe Earth by Hector L Bonilla. astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth.
http://www.booksearchengine.org/Hector_L_Bonilla_book_Astrogeology_Origin_and_De
More books :
Processing Declarative Knowledge International Workshop Pdk 91 Kaiserslautern Germany July 1 - 3 1991 Proceedings Lecture Notes in Artificial by H Boley MM Richter
Vistas an Interactive Course in English Level 1 Workbook
written by H Brown
Current Topics in Intensive Care 4
book by H Burchardi
The American past and the American present an inaugural lecture delivered before the University of Oxford on 1 June 1970
H G Nicholas
New Vistas 1
H Douglas Brown
Graph Grammars and Their Application to Computer Science 4th International Workshop Bremen Germany March 5 - 9 1990 Proceedings
H Ehrig
On translations of the Bible the Ethel M Wood lecture delivered before the University of London on 6 March 1972
H F D Sparks
Solaris Performance Administration Performance Measurement Fine Tuning and Capacity Planning for Releases 251 and 26
H Frank Cervone
Solaris 7 Performance Administration Tools
H Frank Cervone Frank H Cervone
Outline of History
H G Wells Basic Idioms in American English Book 2 H H Setzler Links vio Paz book Itinerary An Intellectual Journey wery Nixon book Johns Story 1775 Colonial Williamsburg Young Ame own book Training for Speed Agility and Quickness ok Using Lotus 1 2 3 ... Index
Astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth by Hector L Bonilla
Astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth Astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth More Details Astrogeology Origin and Destiny of the Earth Hector L Bonilla:

43. AAPG Committee Profiles
astrogeology Committee Profile. Chairman Cannon, Philip Jan. Related LinksHuman Exploration Conventio. Meetings/Events astrogeology Mon. March
http://infosystems.aapg.org/committees/commprofile.cfm?CMCMTNO=266

44. USGS Astrogeology: Search The Astrogeology Research Program Websites
US Department of the Interior US Geological Survey Home Search Disclaimers Privacy Send comments to webteam@astrogeology.usgs.gov, FirstGov Your First
http://0-astrogeology.usgs.gov.library.csuhayward.edu/Search/
Your browser does not support frames. Please follow this link to the Search page U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey
Home
... Search
Send comments to webteam@astrogeology.usgs.gov

45. ASTROGEOLOGY (in MARION)
astrogeology. astrogeology. (LC) ( about) (1 title); astrogeology Miscellanea.(LC) (1 title). HELP Search the Catalog About My Account Back to Start
http://vax1.memphis.lib.tn.us/MARION?S=ASTROGEOLOGY

46. Records For Astrogeology. (LC) (in MARION)
astrogeology. (LC). Record 1 of 1. Erickson, Jon, 1948 Plate tectonics unravelingthe mysteries of the earth / Jon Erickson. New York Facts on File, c1992.
http://vax1.memphis.lib.tn.us/MARION/@ASTROGEOLOGY/4f5900004100/0
Astrogeology. (LC)
Record 1 of 1

47. CANOPUS 02/07 - United States Geological Survey
USGS astrogeology RESEARCH PROGRAM WEBSITE LAUNCH. We are pleased to announcethe recent launch of the new USGS astrogeology Research Program website
http://www.aqua.co.za/assa_jhb/Canopus/Can2002/c027USGS.htm

48. Untitled
Meteor Crater's Visitors Center includes the Museum of astrogeologyand an Astronaut Hall of Fame, gift shop and snack bar. Meteor
http://www.meteorcrater.com/Mcrater.htm
What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object? Meteor Crater
50,000 years ago, a huge iron-nickel meteorite, hurtling at about 40,000 miles per hour, struck the rocky plain of Northern Arizona with an explosive force greater than 20 million tons of TNT. The meteorite estimated to have been about 150 feet across and weighing several hundred thousand tons, in less than a few seconds, left a crater 700 feet deep and over 4000 feet across. Large blocks of limestone, some the size of small houses were heaved onto the rim. Flat-lying beds of rock in the crater walls were overturned in fractions of a second and uplifted permanently as much as 150 feet. Today the crater is 550 feet deep, and 2.4 miles in circumference. Twenty football games could be played simultaneously on its floor, while more than two million spectators observed from its sloping sides. In 1902, Daniel Moreau Barringer, a Philadelphia mining engineer, became interested in the site as a potential source for mining iron. He later visited the crater and was convinced that it had been formed by the impact of a large iron meteorite. He further assumed that this body was buried beneath the crater floor. Barringer was correct. The crater was formed by a meteorite impact, but what he did not know was that the meteorite underwent total disintegration during impact through vaporization, melting and fragmentation. In 1903, he formed the Standard Iron Company and had four placer mining claims filed with the federal Government, thus obtaining the patents and ownership of the two square miles containing the crater. Barringer spent the next 26 years attempting to find what he believed would be the giant iron meteorite. Barringer never found what he was looking for, but did eventually prove to the scientific community that the crater was the site of a meteorite impact.

49. ITU Library Services
Num, Konular (12 / 2), Yil, Bulunan 3 Giris. 1, astrogeology Bakinizayrica Lunar geology, 1. 2, astrogeology, 2.
http://divit.library.itu.edu.tr/search*tur/d?Astrogeology

50. Encyclopædia Britannica
Search Tips. Your search astrogeology. Encyclopædia Britannica, astrogeology journals.View articles on astrogeology. The Web's Best Sites.
http://www.britannica.com/search?miid=1110063&query=astrogeology

51. Outer-space.org - News
USGS astrogeology Research Program Website Launch. We are pleased to announcethe recent launch of the new USGS astrogeology Research Program website
http://www.outer-space.org/news/2002/06/news07_02.html
return Highlight(this,true) return Highlight(this,true) return Highlight(this,false) return Highlight(this,false) News Shuttle ISS Status Reports ... Feedback USGS Astrogeology Research Program Website Launch We are pleased to announce the recent launch of the new USGS Astrogeology Research Program website: http://astrogeology.usgs.gov The site is a portal to information on our research, projects, and products. Featured on the site is information about our long history in planetary and terrestrial mapping and geology, our past and current mission involvement, and where we're headed in the future. Plus, you'll find news, solar system information, career postings, image galleries, and more! Whether you're a kid, scientist, teacher, or enthusiast, you'll find a wealth of information and resources about our solar system and the work we're doing to unlock its secrets. The mission of the USGS Astrogeology Research Program is to establish and maintain geoscientific and technical expertise in planetary science and remote sensing to: * scientifically study and map the solar system's planetary bodies, asteroids, and comets

52. Mauro's Bookmarks Astrogeology
mauro's bookmarks astrogeology. 10. Top Personal Toolbar Folder astronomySSYSTEM astrogeology USGS astrogeology Research
http://oberon01.pd.infn.it:5210/~mauro/bk2site/Personal_Toolbar_Folder/astronomy

53. Archive Of Astronomy Questions And Answers
What is astrogeology and what are the career possibilities? astrogeologyis the branch of astronomy that deals with the physical
http://itss.raytheon.com/cafe/qadir/q272.html
What is astrogeology and what are the career possibilities?
Astrogeology is the branch of astronomy that deals with the physical properties of the surfaces of the planets in our solar system. This includes the analysis of photographs taken by various 'flyby' and 'orbital' missions to the planets, identifying and classifying surface features and putting them together into an integrated history of the planet. Lately, the analysis of meteoritic material from the antarctic has shown that some of the material probably came from the Moon and Mars, so we seem to have samples of these bodies to analyze right here on Earth. As for career opportunities, the locus of the work is at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena California. Although analysis of data from past missions, and from the Hubble Space Telescope, is on going, the life blood of this research is in new NASA programs such as this month's Galileo probe of Jupiter's atmosphere, and the 1997 launch of the Cassini, Saturn/Titan probe. Planetary astronomy is going through hard times because its life blood is in NASA programs that all too often have a tendency of getting cut by Congress. This area of astronomy was in the limelight last spring during the Comet Shoemaker- Levi collision with Jupiter. Return to Ask the Astronomer

54. Project Rolo
Person in Charge. Hugh Kieffer USGS astrogeology Nominal contact personfor the ROLO project, spacecraft mission and instrument interface.
http://www.moon-cal.org/ROLO_old/ROLO/allin1.html
Personnel
Project ROLO is run by the U.S. Geological Survey . Funding is provided by the NASA EOS mission . The use of the Moon for spacecraft calibration was first conceived in 1985 by Drs. Hugh Kieffer and Robert Wildey. Construction of ROLO began in 1992 and regular observations began early 1996. ROLO is located at the USGS Field Station in beautiful Flagstaff, Arizona
Person in Charge
Hugh Kieffer
USGS Astrogeology
Nominal contact person for the ROLO project, spacecraft mission and instrument interface.
Hugh Kieffer
US Geological Survey
2255 N. Gemini Dr.
Flagstaff, AZ 86001
hkieffer@flagmail.wr.usgs. gov
Employees
James M Anderson
USGS Astrogeology
Computer Scientist
In charge of everything that isn't someone else's responsibility.
anderson@flagmail.wr.usgs. gov

Kris Becker
USGS Astrogeology Computer Scientist Specializes in ISIS programming for data reduction and overall programming design. kbecker@flagmail.wr.usgs. gov
Dave Dodd
USGS Astrogeology Electronics Specialist ddodd@flagmail.wr.usgs.gov
Chris Coffey
USGS Astrogeology Computer Clerk, Web site maintainer

55. SSE: Press Releases: 10-June-02: Get The Scoop Of Planetary Geology
Get the Scoop of Planetary Geology June 10, 2002. News Release USGS astrogeologyResearch Program Flagstaff Field Center, Arizona 2002/06/06.
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/whatsnew/pr/020610B.html
Get the Scoop of Planetary Geology
June 10, 2002
News Release
USGS Astrogeology Research Program
Flagstaff Field Center, Arizona
We are pleased to announce the recent launch of the new USGS Astrogeology Research Program website: http://astrogeology.usgs.gov The site is a portal to information on our research, projects, and products. Featured on the site is information about our long history in planetary and terrestrial mapping and geology, our past and current mission involvement, and where we're headed in the future. Plus, you'll find news, solar system information, career postings, image galleries, and more! Whether you're a kid, scientist, teacher, or enthusiast, you'll find a wealth of information and resources about our solar system and the work we're doing to unlock its secrets. The mission of the USGS Astrogeology Research Program is to establish and maintain geoscientific and technical expertise in planetary science and remote sensing to: * scientifically study and map the solar system's planetary bodies, asteroids, and comets, * plan and conduct planetary exploration missions, and * explore and develop new technologies in data processing and analysis, archiving, and distribution. The Astrogeology Research Program contributes to and serves to support a variety of projects for agencies throughout the Federal Government, including NASA, JPL, Departments of Defense and Energy, and the USGS.

56. Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations
Num Mark SUBJECTS (14 of 4) Year Entries 8 Found 1 astrogeology 4Related Subjects 4 2 astrogeology. 2 3 astrogeology Miscellanea.
http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/10,938,892/search/d?Astrogeolog

57. LEARN Volume III
Senior Supervisor for School and Special Programs, Lowell Observatory In thisissue *Important dates in July *Daily sky almanac *astrogeology Web site
http://www.lowell.edu/Public/LEARN/voliii7.htm
LEARN Volume III, Number 7 (July 2002)
Edited by Kevin Schindler, Senior Supervisor for School and Special
Programs, Lowell Observatory
In this issue:
*Important dates in July
*Daily sky almanac
*Astrogeology Web site
*Pressure of Venus demonstration
*Astronomy dictionary
*Manned mission transcripts and audio/video files
*"Eyes on the Sky, Feet on the Ground" astronomy activities Important dates in July July 2: Last quarter moon. July 4: It is believed that on this date in 1054 Chinese astronomers observed the supernova explosion that created the Crab Nebula, in the constellation Taurus. For more information see http://www.seds.org/messier/m/m001.html July 10: New moon. July 11: In 1979 Skylab, America's first experimental space station, was returned to Earth. Skylab was destroyed upon reentry, with pieces being dispersed from the southeastern Indian Ocean to western Australia. For information about Skylab see http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/history/skylab/skylab.html July 14: In 1965 Mariner 4 passed within 9846 kilometers (6118 miles) of Mars and returned the first close-up images of the red planet. For

58. Science/Mathematics, Planets, Geology, Astrogeology, Science, Earth Sciences, As
Science/Mathematics, Planets, Geology, astrogeology, Science, Earth Sciences, Astronomy Solar System Christiansen Eric H., Hamblin W. Kenneth Exploring the
http://www.my-literature-shop.com/Christiansen-Eric-H-Hamblin-W--0023224215.html
Science/Mathematics, Planets, Geology, Astrogeology, Science, Earth Sciences, Astronomy - Solar System Christiansen Eric H., Hamblin W. Kenneth Exploring the Planets
Title: Exploring the Planets
Subject: Science/Mathematics, Planets, Geology, Astrogeology, Science, Earth Sciences, Astronomy - Solar System
Subject2 Science
Author: Christiansen Eric H. Hamblin W. Kenneth
Ferguson Marianne Women and R...

Fichter Lynn, Poche David J....

Hume David, Fieser James Dav...

Fink Conrad C., Fink Donald ...
...
Home

59. Astronomical Adventures
Additional day activities can include solar viewing in both white light and hydrogenalpha,and visits to the Museum of astrogeology, Astronaut Hall of Fame
http://astronomy-mall.com/regular/products/astronomical-adventures/
ASTRONOMICAL ADVENTURES, where space and geologic times meet for the best views of the heavens and Earth , is pleased to invite you to join us in exploring the Earth as a planet and examining the contents and depths of the Universe with large telescopes. Capacity is limited to allow optimum small group dynamics and individual attention in our multi-day Discovery Programs. Averaging over 300 clear nights a year, you will have ample opportunity to enjoy a naked eye sky with the Zodiacal Light stretching 90 degrees, the Gegenschein visible all night, a splendidly detailed Milky Way spanning the sky, and more stars than you can shake a stick at as meteors punctuate your thoughts. You will use our 36", 30", 14.5", 13.1" reflecting telescopes, 4" solar and planetary telescopes, 7x35, 10x50 and 16x80 binoculars to locate and behold breathtaking views of deep sky objects. Stare at spiral arms in galaxies, color in nebulae, central stars in planetary nebulae, galaxies hundreds of millions of light years away, clusters and nebulae in other galaxies, and much more. Use our reference library to pre-plan your observing sessions and to research objects under study. In the end, you will have viewed virtually every observable type of object in space, from the spectacular "showcase" wonders, to the dim denizens of deep space. Separate day and night programs are available, as are programs of more or less than five days. The itinerary of the multi-day programs will dictate the schedule for daily destinations. Weather and customer customized rescheduling possibilities do not allow us to post a definite schedule for a given day in advance. Contact us prior to your visit to obtain more information on scheduling a day tour for you. Greater flexibility is available for single night use, but capacity is very limited.

60. Astronomical Adventures
Additional day activities will include solar viewing in both white light and hydrogenalpha,and visits to the Museum of astrogeology, Astronaut Hall of Fame
http://astronomy-mall.com/regular/products/astronomical-adventures/astroad1.html
ASTRONOMICAL ADVENTURES, where space and geologic times meet for the best views of the heavens and Earth , is pleased to invite you to join us in exploring the Earth as a planet and examining the contents and depths of the Universe with large telescopes. Capacity is limited to allow optimum small group dynamics and individual attention in our 6 day Discovery Programs. Averaging over 300 clear nights a year, you will have ample opportunity to enjoy a naked eye sky with the Zodiacal Light stretching 90 degrees, the Gegenschein visible all night, a splendidly detailed Milky Way spanning the sky, and more stars than you can shake a stick at as meteors punctuate your thoughts. You will use our 36", 30", 14.5", 13.1" reflecting telescopes, 4" solar and planetary telescopes, 7x35, 10x50 and 16x80 binoculars to locate and behold breathtaking views of deep sky objects. Stare at spiral arms in galaxies, color in nebulae, central stars in planetary nebulae, galaxies hundreds of millions of light years away, clusters and nebulae in other galaxies, and much more. Use our reference library to pre-plan your observing sessions and to research objects under study. In the end, you will have viewed virtually every observable type of object in space, from the spectacular "showcase" wonders, to the dim denizens of deep space. Separate day and night programs are available, as are programs of more or less than six days. The itinerary of the six day programs will dictate the schedule for daily destinations. Weather and customer customized rescheduling possibilities do not allow us to post a definite schedule for a given day in advance. Contact us prior to your visit to obtain more information on scheduling a day tour for you. Greater flexibility is available for single night use, but capacity is very limited.

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