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Time for those red-blue glasses again! And Wow! Look at that depth of field!
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- 2
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- 3
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- 3
- Total Views
- 14650
- Explore Score
- 97
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Right eye view of the anaglyph GigaPan found here: www.gigapan.org/gigapans/12345/
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- 4
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- Total Views
- 3917
- Explore Score
- 87
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Normal fault in the Fort Hays member of the Cretaceous Niobrara Formation, south of Stockton, Kansas. These chalk beds were originally deposited in the shallow Western Interior Seaway about 80 million years ago. The thick beds of the Fort Hays member are extensively bioturbated. Faulting is post-Cretaceous and pre-Q...
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- 5
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- 3
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- 7360
- Explore Score
- 65
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Long roadcut west of Stockton, Kansas exposing the Fort Hays Limestone.
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- 3555
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- 45
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Roadcut in Fort Hays Limestone on the west side of 24 Road between R and S in Rooks County, Kansas. This roadcut is directly opposite www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=2849 . A detail of this roadcut can be seen at www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=2826
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- 5
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- 4702
- Explore Score
- 30
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180+ degree panorama along 12 Road in southern Rooks County, Kansas. The distant cliff formed by the cutbank of a small stream exposes the rarely seen contact between the Fort Hays and Smoky Hill members of the Upper Cretaceous Niobrara Chalk. The Fort Hays member is characterized by thick bioturbated chalk beds wher...
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- 3
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- 3906
- Explore Score
- 22
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Left eye view of the anaglyph GigaPan found here: www.gigapan.org/gigapans/12345/
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- 1
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- Total Views
- 2786
- Explore Score
- 15
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Erosional remnant of the Smoky Hill Chalk at the Castle Rock Badlands, south of Quinter, Kansas.
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- 5
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- 5014
- Explore Score
- 10
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Castle Rock is an erosional remnant of Cretaceous Smoky Hill Chalk in southeastern Gove County, Kansas. Historically it was an important landmark on the Butterfield Overland Trail. (Berti is still hiding. Snapshot him if you find him!)
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- 4622
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- 1
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Erosional remnants of the Upper Cretaceous Smoky Hill Chalk. The approaching thunderstorm provided a great contrast.
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- 4
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- 4
- Total Views
- 4524
- Explore Score
- 1
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