Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
place, which view Mr. White entertains. The state
of the east of this fault rest unconformably upon
a fluted very compact basalt. My sample is a
emphaci species and in thugpos method. See if
the gulmud sample from the outic'd dith' path
restored is of the same picture.
Mr. Stieker was away all day climbing one
of the basalt peaks back of the camp. He
returns at 6 P.M. tired out after an exciting
day climb. Part of the descent was on a glacier.
His experience was not the most pleasant.
The day was clouded but not very cold. The
thermometer at 7:00 P.M. registers 38° in the tent.
Seen biggest lava mints.
The north end of a ? species were seen to dry on the
bench from where it drifted over one penny.
Torn page?
Blew the ovates out of where the ovates could not find it,
since it was this way they got their novel used in Kist making.
Aug 16 Monday Slibensteinfeld
Set up at 5:30 and have breakfast by 6 A.M. Mr.
White and I started up the hills and sawines back
of the camp. He did not go far before we discovered
Purins cravers indicating that the hills back of the
tent and crest of the cliffs along the sea are of some
age. We expecting the Giland beds to continue
westward since there is our clear evidence of.