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         Astrogeology:     more books (76)
  1. Basic Astronautics: an Introduction to Space Science, Engineering, and Medicine by Frederick I., III; Gardner, James Patrick; Sharpe, Mitchell R., Jr Ordway, 1962-01-01
  2. Mars: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Space Sciences</i> by Nadine G. Barlow, 2002
  3. SPACE AND PLANETARY GEOLOGY: An entry from Gale's <i>World of Earth Science</i>
  4. Shoemaker by Levy: The Man Who Made an Impact by David H. Levy, 2002-11-04
  5. Stardust to Planets: A Geological Tour of the Solar System by Harry Y. McSween, 1995-07
  6. Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites (Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series) by O. Richard Norton, Lawrence Chitwood, 2008-06-06
  7. Hazards Due to Comets and Asteroids (University of Arizona Space Science Series)
  8. The Geology of Multi-Ring Impact Basins: The Moon and Other Planets (Cambridge Planetary Science Old) by Paul D. Spudis, 2005-02-17
  9. Solar System History from Isotopic Signatures of Volatile Elements (Space Sciences Series of ISSI)
  10. Comparative Planetology with an Earth Perspective: Proceedings of the First International Conference, Held in Pasadena, California on June 6-8, 1994
  11. Progress of Seismology of the Sun and Stars: Proceedings of the Oji International Seminar Held at Hakone, Japan, 11-14, December, 1989 (Lecture Notes in Physics) by Y. Osaki, 1990-12
  12. Exploring the Planets: An Introduction to Planetary Geology by William Kenneth Hamblin, 1990-02
  13. Venus Geology, Geochemistry, and Geophysics: Research from the USSR by A. T. Basilevsky, V. P. Volkov, 1992-03
  14. An Introduction to Cosmochemistry by Charles R. Cowley, 1995-01-27

61. Flagstaff Tea Party
Group says USGS astrogeology building is historic. Together they house more than200 USGS employees, most of whom work in fields other than astrogeology.
http://www.flagteaparty.org/Publications/Dec2000/Pages/Monthly/cover.html
News Center Home A community forum for the discussion of progressive ideas Volume 1, Number 5 December 2000 Free Donations appreciated Is this building history?
Group says USGS Astrogeology building is historic.
USGS says it's in the way. By Dan Frazier, Tea Party Editor
eology. In 1964, the U.S. Geological Survey began construction of one of the world's first buildings devoted to Astrogeology. The new 14,000-square-foot building atop McMillan Mesa was to be used to create maps of the moon in advance of a manned lunar landing. An ambitious young Astrogeologist, Eugene Shoemaker, had helped to select the site for the building and wielded the ground-breaking shovel.
The north side of Building One, meant to be the building’s front, is rarely seen these days except by those on a foot trail near Buffalo Park. The trail was once Cedar Avenue, until Cedar was rerouted in the 1980's.

62. Flagstaff Tea Party
Eugene Shoemaker was just 34 when he broke ground on Building One. Atthe time, he was the chief of the USGS Branch of astrogeology.
http://www.flagteaparty.org/Publications/Dec2000/Pages/shoemaker.html
News Center Home A community forum for the discussion of progressive ideas Volume 1, Number 5 December 2000 Free Donations appreciated Eugene Shoemaker By Dan Frazier, Tea Party Editor Eugene Shoemaker was just 34 when he broke ground on Building One. At the time, he was the chief of the USGS Branch of Astrogeology. He would go on to a celebrated career, helping to firmly establish the new science of Astrogeology. Though he maintained an office in Building One throughout much of his career, he spent much of his time doing Astrogeology work at various field locations on the Colorado Plateau, including Meteor Crater. He helped to establish conclusively that Meteor Crater was the result of a meteor impact. He worked extensively with the Apollo program, helping to train astronauts in the use of geologic tools to be used on the moon. For three years beginning in 1969, he lived in Los Angeles, where he chaired the Geology Department at the California Institute of Technology. Later in his career, he returned to Flagstaff, though he frequently traveled to California's Palomar observatory and other scientific centers around the world. Working with his wife, Carolyn, he helped to discover 32 comets, a record-setting accomplishment. He is best known for helping to discover Shoemaker-Levy 9, which plunged into Jupiter in 1994. Shoemaker died in 1997, while traveling in Australia. In honor of Shoemaker's achievements, a vial carrying an ounce of his ashes was sent to the moon aboard the Lunar Prospector in 1999. The highlights of Shoemaker's career are recounted in Shoemaker the Man who Made an Impact by David H. Levy.

63. Innovative Library /All Locations
astrogeology see also Mars Planet Geology, 1.astrogeology Miscellanea Popular Works, 1993. 1.
http://www.iii.com:90/kids/10,938/search/dAstrogeology -- Miscellanea -- Popular

64. Waukegan Public Library /All Locations
See Cosmochemistry 1 Astrodiagnosis See Medical Astrology 1 Astrodome HoustonTex 1997 1 Astrodynamics 4 Related Subjects 4 astrogeology 2 Related
http://catalog.waukeganpl.org:90/kids/0,10,938/search/dAstrogeology -- Miscellan
WORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT Children's Collection Bookmobile Collection Audio/Visual Collection Spanish Collection View Entire Collection Mark Nearby SUBJECTS are: Year Entries Astrochemistry See Cosmochemistry
Astrodiagnosis See Medical Astrology
Astrodome Houston Tex
Astrodynamics 4 Related Subjects ...
Astrology And Business

65. Geoscience Links
Home. Geoscience Links. astrogeology, Environmental Geology, Paleontology.Earth them. astrogeology. NearEarth Objects Research. Official
http://www.occ.cc.mi.us/earthsci/links.htm
Earth Sciences Home
Geoscience Links
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Geoscience Links
Astrogeology Environmental Geology Paleontology Earth and Space Imagery ... Oceanography Click on a category title to access the linked sites within each category, or use the scroll function to reach these sites.
Astrogeology
Near-Earth Objects Research Official SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute Home Page NASA Planetary Resources Astronomy Course at Eckerd College ... Top
Earth and Space Imagery
Johnson Space Center Digital Images Jet Propulsion Laboratory Public Image Archive National Geophysical Data Center National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center ... Top
Earthquakes and Seismology
National Earthquake Information Center Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research California Institute of Technology Seismology Lab Canadian National Earthquake Hazards Program ... Top
Earth Science Education
U.S. and Canada College and University Geoscience Departments National Earth Science Teachers Association The GLOBE Program Nebraska Earth Science Education Network ... Top
Energy and Mining Resources
Hawaii Natural Energy Institute Natural Energy Lab of Hawaii MineNet Mining Association of Canada ... U.S. DOE Fossil Energy Resources

66. Report To The Executive Committee -- Ottawa 1999
Louis, MO 63130, USA arvidson@wunder.wustl.edu Jennifer Blue Branch of astrogeologyUS Geological Survey 2255 N. Gemini Drive Flagstaff, AZ 86001, USA jblue
http://www.nasm.si.edu/ceps/ica/report99.html
Report to the Executive Committee for the 1999 General Assembly of the International Cartographic Association:
Index 1) Planetary Cartography Working Group 2) Co-Chairs: 3) Terms of Reference (1995-1999) 4) Members ... 11) Comments
1) Planetary Cartography Working Group
2) Co-Chairs:
James Zimbelman
Center for Earth and Planetary Studies
Smithsonian Institution
PO Box 37012
National Air and Space Museum, MRC 315
Washington, D.C. 20013-7012
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Ph: 202-786-2981 Fx: 202-786-2566 jrz@ceps.nasm.edu Kira Shingareva Moscow State University for Geodesy and Cartography 4 Gorokhovsky per. Moscow 103064 RUSSIA Ph: 7-095-261-3948 Fx: 7-095-267-4681 Kira.Shingareva@caravan.ru 3) Terms of Reference (1995-1999) Overall Theme: Harmonization of international planetary cartography efforts. Note that "harmonization" is not the same as "homogenization". We are not advocating an effort to make all national programs look the same. Instead, we are interested in facilitating the free interchange of ideas and information between various national efforts that incorporate some component of planetary cartography. 1. The promotion of all aspects of planetary cartography in an international setting, particularly 1) scientific research, 2) education, and 3) public outreach.

67. Eugene Shoemaker (1928-1997)
In 1961 he took a leading role in the USGS venture, in Flagstaff, Arizona, intothe study of astrogeology , the Ranger missions to the moon and the training
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/sl9/news81.html
Eugene Shoemaker (1928-1997)
EUGENE M. SHOEMAKER (1928-1997)
Written by Brian Marsden Gene Shoemaker, renowned both as a geologist and an astronomer, and a member of the Board of Directors of The Spaceguard Foundation, was killed instantly on the afternoon of July 18, when his car collided head-on with another vehicle on an unpaved road in the Tanami Desert northwest of Alice Springs, in the Northern Territory of Australia. His wife Carolyn, who had closely collaborated with him in both his geological and his astronomical activities for many years, was injured in the accident and is in stable condition in Alice Springs Hospital. Gene Shoemaker and Carolyn Spellman were married in 1951. A visit to Arizona's Meteor Crater the following year began to set Gene toward the view that both it and the lunar craters were due to asteroidal impacts. In 1956 he tried to interest the USGS in the construction of a geological map of the moon. This work was sidelined, because the national interest in the production of plutonium led him to study of the craters formed in small nuclear explosions under the Yucca Flats in Nevada and invited a comparison with Meteor Crater. It was then that he did his seminal research on the mechanics of meteorite impacts that included the discovery, with Edward Chao, of coesite, a type of silica produced in a violent impact. Awarded a master's degree in 1954, Gene Shoemaker received his doctorate from Princeton in 1960 with a thesis on Meteor Crater.

68. Doi
environment. The USGS astrogeology Program continued to make significantcontributions to the exploration of the solar system. NASA's
http://history.nasa.gov/presrep99/pages/doi.html
The Landsat 7 satellite was launched successfully on April 15, 1999. NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) are jointly managing the program. Landsat 7 is extending the medium-resolution global land coverage that has been the hallmark of the Landsat program since 1972. A complete global archive of relatively cloud-free coverage was collected during the first 6 months of operation; such coverage has not been achieved in nearly a decade. All Landsat 7 data received at the primary ground station at the USGS Earth Resources Observation System (EROS) Data Center are being archived and made available to the public in digital format within 24 hours of collection. The USGS EROS Data Center Earth Observing System Distributed Active Archive Center, which is funded by NASA, supported four missions in 1999, including the prelaunch, instrument checkout, and operations activities of Landsat 7 and the prelaunch and operations readiness activities in support of the Terra mission. USGS staff participated in the calibration of the Terra Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer instrument that is collecting information on Earth's environment. The USGS Astrogeology Program continued to make significant contributions to the exploration of the solar system. NASA's Galileo mission to Jupiter continued to return exceptional images of Io and other Jovian satellites that give major insight into the surficial processes at work on those moons. The Deep Space 1 spacecraft returned image and spectral data from a near-Earth asteroid, leading to new knowledge that perhaps the near-Earth asteroid Braille is related to the much larger and well-studied asteroid Vesta, perhaps as a "chip off Vesta's old block" or as a "sibling" from a larger body that has long since been destroyed.

69. APOD: January 15, 1998 - Eugene Shoemaker: 1928-1997
Eugene Shoemaker 19281997 Credit Courtesy US Geological Survey. ExplanationEugene Shoemaker's passion was astrogeology. He dreamed of going to the Moon.
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980115.html
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer. January 15, 1998
Eugene Shoemaker: 1928-1997
Credit:
Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey Explanation: Eugene Shoemaker's passion was Astrogeology . He dreamed of going to the Moon . Credited with inventing the branch of Astrogeology within the U.S. Geological Survey , his contributions to the field and the study of impact craters, lunar science, asteroids, and comets are legendary. Though his own career as an astronaut/geologist was sidelined by a health problem, he helped train the Apollo astronauts in geology and the investigation of the lunar surface . Seen here at Meteor Crater, Arizona in the mid 1960s, Shoemaker was killed in a tragic car accident in July 1997. He is survived by his wife and professional colleague, Carolyn, and children. In a fitting tribute conceived by a former student , Eugene Shoemaker's ashes were placed on-board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft which has now successfully reached a polar mapping orbit around the Moon. After completing its scientific mission, the spacecraft will ultimately impact the lunar surface.

70. News: Eugene Shoemaker Dies
In 1961, he organized the Branch of astrogeology of the US GeologicalSurvey in Flagstaff, and acted as its director from 1961 to 1966.
http://www.skeptics.com.au/features/news/shoe-die.htm
Australian
Skeptics What's New Quick Tour News Site Map ... Search Eugene Shoemaker Dies Back to: Home Features News Home ... Web
Contents:
From David Morrison From Brian G. Marsden
Return-path dmorrison@mail.arc.nasa.gov
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 12:45:53 -0700
dmorrison@mail.arc.nasa.gov

Subject: NEO News: More on Shoemaker
To: dmorrison@mail.arc.nasa.gov
EUGENE M. SHOEMAKER (1928-1997) Eugene ("Gene") Shoemaker, 69, was killed in a two-car accident near Alice Springs, Australia, on the afternoon of July 18. His wife Carolyn suffered broken bones, and is hospitalized in stable condition at Alice Springs Hospital. A geologist by training, Shoemaker is best known for discovering, with his wife Carolyn and colleague David Levy, a comet near Jupiter. Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 was broken up by tidal forces from Jupiter, and fragments collided with the planet in July 1994. Together, the Shoemakers were the leading discoverers of comets this century. Shoemaker carried out pioneering work on the nature and origin of the Barringer Meteor Crater, near Winslow Arizona, which helped provide a foundation for cratering research on the Moon and planets. This work led to the establishment of a lunar chronology, allowing the dating of geological features of our sateliie’s surface. Shoemaker took part in the Ranger missions, was principal investigator for the television experiment on the Surveyor lunar landers (1963-1968), and led the geology field investigations team for the first Apollo lunar landings (1965-1970). In 1961, he organized the Branch of Astrogeology of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, and acted as its director from 1961 to 1966. On his retirement from USGS in 1993, Shoemaker became a staff member at Lowell Observatory. Most recently, he was active in the Clementine mission that imaged the Moon, and was science team leader on the Clementine 2 mission. That mission will examine two or more near-Earth objects close up. Shoemaker won numerous awards, and in 1980 became a member of the Natioanl Academy of Science.

71. Making Globes Of The Planets
So I wrote a quick GIMP plugin to make gore maps, and generated theseimages. Update USGS astrogeology Maps and Globes now available.
http://www.vendian.org/mncharity/dir3/planet_globes/
Making globes of the planets
A reader wished to make globes of the planets, but wanted rounder ones than Planetary Icosahedrons . I am told the USGS in Flagstaff Arizona has some in the works, but as of 2001-Nov-11, they are not yet available. So I wrote a quick GIMP plug-in to make gore maps, and generated these images. [ Update USGS Astrogeology: Maps and Globes now available.] You can print them out, cut them out, and bend them into globes.
(Mostly diameters of about 8cm and 16cm.)
I suggest you first try Planetary Icosahedrons , which are easier to make.
part Mercury
From Maps of the Solar System - Mercury
Image 0/Mercury 580k tif
Image smaller version 0/Mercury 135k jpg
an example page
(1 of 6)
PDF version
4MB (somewhat lossy)
TIFF version
Mercury
High resolution globe - 300 bpi, ~30 cm diameter (hemisphere) From MARINER 10 MERCURY Shaded Relief Map Image TIFF format Simp Cyl Proj; 10 Mbytes Venus Visually boring. part Earth - no clouds From Earth images Image AVHRR Pathfinder 2048x1024 (192k) Image smaller version Brightened slightly. Perhaps not enough.

72. G201 Fall 2000
G 456U /556 astrogeology. Winter Term 2003. MW channels. astrogeologystudents explore Big Obsidian Flow in Newberry National Monument.
http://web.pdx.edu/~ruzickaa/G456/
Department of Geology – Portland State University
Geology Home
Courses People Site Search
G 456U / G556 Astrogeology
Winter Term 2003
MW 9:00 - 9:50, CH 158
T 8:00-9:50, CH 1
A. Ruzicka
e-mail: ruzickaa@pdx.edu
Water, water, everywhere! "Pendant crater" on Mars (left) recording evidence for massive flooding (current from upper right to lower left); two interior models for Europa (right), which contains a crust of water ice that may overlie a subsurface ocean. Images courtesy of NASA.

Course information
  • Syllabus. Sample test questions. 1-19-03 Announcement: Midterm exam. The midterm this coming Wednesday will consist of 30 multiple choice questions. Don't forget to bring your scantron form, a number 2 pencil, and a calculator to class that day. For this part of the course, you should rely on the notes from lecture and what you have learned from doing Lab 1. Soon, the lectures will track more closely to your Text. 1-29-03 Announcement: Revised lecture schedule . The schedule for the remaining term has been revised to reflect the deletion of oral presentations. Exam and lab dates remain the same.

73. Untitled
G456U / G556 astrogeology. Winter 2003. CRN 44798 (456 lecture)/ CRN 44766 (456 lab). ACKNOWLEDGMENTOF SYLLABUS RECEIPT astrogeology G456U/ 556. Winter 2003 PSU.
http://web.pdx.edu/~ruzickaa/G456/456SYL.htm
G456U / G556 Astrogeology Winter 2003 CRN 44798 (456 lecture)/ CRN 44766 (456 lab) CRN 44799 (556 lecture)/ CRN 44767 (556 lab)
Location: Portland State University Lecture CH 158, 9:00-9:50 am MW Lab CH 1, 8:00-9:50 am T Instructor: Dr. Alex Ruzicka CH 17K, 503-725-3372 e-mail: ruzickaa@pdx.edu Office Hours: Regularly scheduled office hours are from 2:30-3:30 PM on Tuesdays. Please make arrangements with me if you would like to meet outside of this time. Class website: http://web.pdx.edu/~ruzickaa/G456
Course Description: Geology and astronomy are combined to better understand the evolution of the solar system. Comparative geologic evolution of the planets, moons, and smaller bodies in the solar system is emphasized. Other topics include impact cratering as a geologic process, celestial mechanics, the formation of stars and planetary systems, the origin of the solar system, planetary evolution, and meteorites. The laboratory component of the course will give students experience with making observations and measurements that illustrate concepts discussed in lecture. Text: Exploring the Planets by Eric Christianson and W. Kenneth Hamblin, Wadsworth Publishing, Fourth Edition.

74. The World Has Lost A True Hero!
Meteor Crater. Later, in 1961 he studied astrogeology , the Rangermissions to the moon and the training of astronauts. Eugene
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/robertalink/worldhas.htm
The world has lost a true hero! The biography of: EUGENE SHOEMAKER Eugene was said to have "lived as he died with his inquiring mind participating in the adventure of ever learning more over an unusually large range of scientific disciplines." He is known to be the "father" of the science of near-earth objects, to the discovery and study of which The Spaceguard Foundation is dedicated, and his expertise will be missed. Having a disease, which enabled him from doing what he wanted and going to moon also adds to why Eugene Shoemaker is known as a hero. While battling with sickness he was a scientist, astrogeologist and head/chairman of many space and science organizations. He was an asset to science and hero among all. The world has suffered a great loss! By Jessica 98 Standing on Giants'

75. Hypography Sci-Tech: Science And Technology For Everyone
9. yvonne, 92. 10. Pandora, 54. Sign up ». Search results for 'astrogeology' submita link » become a link reviewer ». 1 records found. »Back to search front 11
http://ww.hypography.com/searchresults.cfm?query_string=astrogeology

76. APOD: January 15, 1998 - Eugene Shoemaker: 1928-1997
January 15, 1998 Eugene Shoemaker 19281997 Credit Courtesy US GeologicalSurvey. Explanation Eugene Shoemaker's passion was astrogeology.
http://www.phy.mtu.edu/apod/ap980115.html
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer. January 15, 1998
Eugene Shoemaker: 1928-1997
Credit:
Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey Explanation: Eugene Shoemaker's passion was Astrogeology . He dreamed of going to the Moon . Credited with inventing the branch of Astrogeology within the U.S. Geological Survey , his contributions to the field and the study of impact craters, lunar science, asteroids, and comets are legendary. Though his own career as an astronaut/geologist was sidelined by a health problem, he helped train the Apollo astronauts in geology and the investigation of the lunar surface . Seen here at Meteor Crater, Arizona in the mid 1960s, Shoemaker was killed in a tragic car accident in July 1997. He is survived by his wife and professional colleague, Carolyn, and children. In a fitting tribute conceived by a former student , Eugene Shoemaker's ashes were placed on-board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft which has now successfully reached a polar mapping orbit around the Moon. After completing its scientific mission, the spacecraft will ultimately impact the lunar surface.

77. Mailing List Wteach@warrensburg.k12.mo.us Message 84
Teachers, Oops getting behind again. Today's awesome site is allabout astrogeology. astrogeology is the study of other planets.
http://mail.warrensburg.k12.mo.us/Lists/wteach/Message/84.html
Mailing List wteach@warrensburg.k12.mo.us Message #84 From: Subject: Stan's Awesome Web Site of the Day - 11/08/02 Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2002 09:29:03 -0600 To:
Teachers,
Oops... getting behind again.
Today's awesome site is all about Astrogeology. No, I'm not talking about
astrology (which is pure poppycock). Astrogeology is the study of other
planets. This site, "USGS Astrogeology Research Program," is a treasure
trove of images, information, videos, and technology related to the field of
astrogeology.
Be sure to visit the Astro Kids! area, where you can go on a virtual tour of
the moon with Flat Stanley (you know, that two dimensional fellow that seems
to travel to every corner of the world, and now beyond). There is also a huge encyclopedia of information and images on each of the planets in our solar system, as well as a variety of educational activities, such as the Mars Armchair Explorer, Map-A-Planet, and maps that allow kids to make their own planet globes. USGS Astrogeology Research Program http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/

78. économiseur D'écran
Translate this page Planets and USGS astrogeology History. Deux écrans de veille dequalité http//astrogeology.usgs.gov/Gallery/ScreenSavers/.
http://www.astrosurf.com/grenier/screensaver.htm
Des économiseurs d'écrans Astronomiques p our Window Retour Acceuil
- LUNE : screensaver
Des images de la lune haute résolutions défilent pour un survol de la Lune. Freeware: Télécharger ici
- PLANETES : screensaver
Des images Planétaires de hautes qualitées prisent avec une webcam. Freeware: Télécharger ici
SETI@home est une expérience scientifique qui utilise des ordinateurs particuliers et Internet dans la Recherche de l'Intelligence Extraterrestre (SETI)
Vous pouvez participer en installant un programme gratuit qui télécharge et analyse des données de radiotélescope. Freeware: http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/
Europa Space Screensaver v2.0
L'économiseur d'écran d'Espace d'Europe montre les vues animées réalistes de la surface d'Europe glaciale comme de Jupiter et le mouvement d'Io majestueusement à travers le ciel.
Shareware avec une version limitée. Superbe ! la version limitée donnerai presque envie d'acheter la version longue. Freeware: Télécharger ici
- Sky Screen Saver for Windows :
L'Économiseur d'écran de Ciel montre le ciel au-dessus de n'importe quel emplacement sur la Terre, y compris des étoiles (du Catalogue d'Étoiles Yale de plus de 9000 étoiles à la 7ème magnitude), la Lune dans sa phase correcte et sa position dans le ciel ainsi que la position du Soleil et de toutes les planètes.

79. SWAN /All Libraries
1 Astrodome Houston Tex 2 Astrodome Houston Tex Juvenile Literature 1997 1 Astrodynamics3 Astrogeologists United States Biography 2000 1 astrogeology 1992 1
http://swan.sls.lib.il.us:90/kids/0,11,921/search/dAstrogeology -- Miscellanea -
KEYWORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT All SWAN libraries Acorn Acorn Juvenile Alsip-Merrionette Park Alsip-Merrionette Park Juvenile Anderson/Oglesby Anderson/Oglesby Juvenile Bedford Park Bedford Park Juvenile Beecher Beecher Juvenile Bellwood Bellwood Juvenile Berkeley Berkeley Juvenile Berwyn Berwyn Juvenile Blue Island Blue Island Juvenile Broadview Broadview Juvenile Brookfield Zoo Brookfield Zoo Education Calumet City Calumet City Juvenile Calumet Park Calumet Park Juvenile Chicago Heights Chicago Heights Juvenile Chicago Ridge Chicago Ridge Juvenile Cicero Cicero Juvenile Cicero Branch Cicero Branch Juvenile Clarendon Hills Clarendon Hills Juvenile Crestwood Crestwood Juvenile Crete Crete Juvenile Dolton Dolton Juvenile Downers Grove Downers Grove Juvenile Eisenhower Eisenhower Juvenile Elmhurst Elmhurst Juvenile Elmwood Park Elmwood Park Juvenile Evergreen Park Evergreen Park Juvenile Flossmoor Flossmoor Juvenile Forest Park Forest Park Juvenile Frankfort Frankfort Juvenile Frankfort Bookmobile Glenwood-Lynwood Glenwood-Lynwood Juvenile Grande Prairie Grande Prairie Juvenile Harvey Harvey Juvenile Hillside Hillside Juvenile Hinsdale Hinsdale Juvenile Hodgkins Hodgkins Juvenile Homewood Homewood Juvenile Indian Prairie Indian Prairie Juvenile Justice Justice Juvenile La Grange La Grange Juvenile La Grange Park La Grange Park Juvenile Lyons Lyons Juvenile Matteson Matteson Juvenile Maywood Maywood Juvenile McClure Junior High School McClure Junior High School Audiovisual McConathy

80. Symposium Abstract
Email barchinal@usgs.gov. Address USGS astrogeology Team, 2255 N. GeminiDrive. Brent A. Archinal astrogeology Team US Geological Survey. Abstract
http://geodesy.eng.ohio-state.edu/50_years/abs_form.php?pass_index=102

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