It's a gorgeous website. One very minor point. I tried this morning
to look at USGS Bulletin 1928 on the Ammonites at Union Wash subpage
and found that all the links to individual pages seem to be broken.
Since I don't seem to be able to send eMail from this PC this week and
I'm not in a mood to figure out why just now, I thought I'd mention
the problem here in case Inyo is not aware of it.
>That is one heck of a nice web page, inyo.
>
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
>> outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
>> trilobites can be collected.
> It's a gorgeous website. One very minor point. I tried this morning
> to look at USGS Bulletin 1928 on the Ammonites at Union Wash subpage
> and found that all the links to individual pages seem to be broken.
> Since I don't seem to be able to send eMail from this PC this week and
> I'm not in a mood to figure out why just now, I thought I'd mention
> the problem here in case Inyo is not aware of it.
Thanks so much for the very kind words. And that was one great catch,
indeed. Apparently, I had neglected to upload the html pages to
accompany the images already in the Web Space--ergo, every link was
broken; problem has been fixed, I do believe. Thank you much for
pointing out the broken links! The web page in question, by the way, is
http://members.aol.com/Waucoba7/uw/usgsbulletin.html . As Don pointed
out, this is an online version of USGS Bulletin 1928, "Stratigraphy of
the Lower And Middle(?) Triassic Union Wash Formation, East-Central
California," by Paul Stone, Calvin H. Stevens, and Michael J. Orchard.
The authors investigate the ammonoid-bearing Union Wash Formation.
> >That is one heck of a nice web page, inyo.
> >
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
> >> outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
> >> trilobites can be collected.