Matching Items (2,888)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962
ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962
ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962
ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962
ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962
41347-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1924-03-25
Description

Letter of introduction for Dwight B. Heard on the arrival of National Park Service Director Stephen T. Mather to Phoenix. Mather's visit includes trips to Roosevelt Dam and Tumacácori.

41169-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsHeard, Dwight (Author)
Created1924-03-29
Description

Letter from Dwight B. Heard, president and publisher of The Arizona Republican, to Carl T. Hayden about a visit by Stephen Mather.

42783-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2014-01
Description

The research team assessed desert bighorn sheep‐highway relationships from 2008 to 2010 along an 18‐mile stretch (mileposts 0−18.0) of U.S. Route 93 southeast of Hoover Dam and 70 miles northwest of Kingman, Arizona. The study section of the highway cuts through the northern extent of the Black Mountains where nearly

The research team assessed desert bighorn sheep‐highway relationships from 2008 to 2010 along an 18‐mile stretch (mileposts 0−18.0) of U.S. Route 93 southeast of Hoover Dam and 70 miles northwest of Kingman, Arizona. The study section of the highway cuts through the northern extent of the Black Mountains where nearly 30 percent of the state’s total desert bighorn sheep population resides. Desert bighorn has long been a focal species of concern in planning for the Hoover Dam Bypass project begun in 2002. The environmental analysis addressed the impact of the widening on desert bighorn sheep travel corridors and habitat fragmentation, as well as the potential for increased sheep‐vehicle collisions. Extensive prior desert bighorn research supported the implementation of a comprehensive set of measures to maintain wildlife connectivity as part of highway reconstruction, including three wildlife overpasses and ungulate‐proof fencing.

62297-Thumbnail Image.jpg
ContributorsPalgen-Maissoneuve, Mimi, 1918-1995 (Photographer)
Created1942 to 1962