A. J. Eardley papers, 1940-1972

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Eardley, A. J.(Armand John), 1901-
Title
A. J. Eardley papers
Dates
1940-1972 (inclusive)
Quantity
4.75 linear feet
Collection Number
MS 0642
Summary
The A. J. Eardley papers (1940-1972) contain the personal and professional papers of Armand John Eardley (1901-1972), a Utah-born geology educator, writer, and administrator. The collection includes personal and textbook materials, magazine articles, essays, notes, and maps.
Repository
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860

Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu
Access Restrictions

Twenty-four hour advanced notice encouraged. Materials must be used on-site. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.

Languages
English

Historical NoteReturn to Top

(This biography, edited here, appeared in the Geological Society of America memorial to Armand John Eardley and was written by William Lee Stokes.)

Armand J. Eardley was born 25 October 1901 in Salt Lake City, Utah. He died in the city of his birth 7 November 1972 at the age of 71. Eardley was of Mormon stock. His father and mother were English, and his four grandparents migrated to Utah under pioneer conditions. He attended the public schools in Salt Lake City and took his college training at Stanford University, University of Utah, and Princeton University. In 1930 he married Norma Ashton. Their son, Michael, was born in 1940. Armand's teaching career began in 1932 at the University of Michigan where, over the ensuing years, he attained the position of full professor. From 1942 to 1949 he was director of the University of Michigan Rocky Mountain Field Station at Camp Davies.

Eardley returned to the University of Utah in 1949. He served as acting head of the Department of Geology from 1951 to 1954 and as dean of the College of Mines and Mineral Industries from 1954 to 1965. In 1970, he retired and became Professor Emeritus.

Armand Eardley was an educator, writer, and administrator, as well as a scientist--the type of individual whose career adds luster and credit to the profession of geology and the institutions which he served. Eardley is probably best known through his books. In these his genius as an expositor and educator shines forth. He sought and reported his own truths but went beyond to integrate and publicize the contributions of others. His first book, Aerial Photographs: Their Use and Interpretation, published in 1942, was a pioneer treatment of what was to become, in an age of aerial and space photography, a discipline of major importance.

In 1951, Harper and Brothers published his monumental 750-page Structural Geology of North America. The title is somewhat misleading as the book is not merely structural geology, it is a reference work on the stratigraphy and historical geology of a continent as well. Although there were many joking comments about its odd shape and format and the difficulty of getting it on a shelf with ordinary books, the decision of the publishers to print it in an 8 1/4 X 11 inch edition was a wise one which did justice to the magnificient flowing lines of Eardley's cross sections and diagrams that are so important and instructive. Without the author's permission, this book was translated into Russian and widely distributed in the U.S.S.R. He never went to Russia to collect the 50,000 rubles due him. A second edition of the book came out in 1962 with seven new chapters and extensive revisions.

In 1965, Harper and Row published his General College Geology, a 499-page textbook for the nonprofessional student. This also reflects Eardley's great desire to make geology interesting and understandable to the average student. Its illustrations include many line drawings and photographs that are Eardley's own work.

His final book, Science of the Earth, was issued by Harper and Row in 1972. Again, it reflects the breadth of his interests and capabilities as well as a desire to instruct. It is more than conventional geology. There are several chapters that must be classed as oceanography and several that are meteorological and climatological. Finally, there is a section on environmental science which stresses the management and conservation of the Earth's water, land, and air.

Not only did Eardley write much that must be classed as educational in aim and content, he also sought to foster and encourage such pursuits in others. He served as president of the National Association of Geology Teachers from 1962 to 1963. He was a member of the steering committee of the Earth Science Curriculum Project which produced the textbook Investigating the Earth, which, together with its student manuals and teachers' guides, made an important contribution to earth science education in the United States.

Eardley served the profession of geology in other important positions. He was actively involved in local as well as national academic and professional organizations. He was president of the Rocky Mountain Section of Petroleum Geologists from 1950 to 1951, a member of the executive committee and editor of the bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists from 1952 to 1954, and president of the American Geological Institute from 1964 to 1965.

Eardley received many honors and awards. He was Distinguished Lecturer, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 1952-1954; and National Lecturer, Sigma Xi, 1956. Among his awards are the Distinguished Service Award, Utah Academy of Sciences, 1958; James E. Talmage Scientific Achievement Award, Brigham Young University, 1963; award for distinguished service in the earth sciences, American Federation of Mineralogical Societies, 1968; Distinguished Research Professor, University of Utah, 1969-1970; and Distinguished Sigma Xi Lecturer, University of Utah, 1970. He received an honorary Doctor of Science degree at the University of Utah in 1970.

When Eardley was called to be dean of the School of Mines and Mineral Industries at the University of Utah in 1954, it was a difficult new position involving integration of eight diverse departments including geology, ceramic engineering, fuels engineering, geophysics, metallurgy, meteorology, mineralogy, and mining and geological engineering. The space problem was acute, and competition among the departments for all resources was a constant problem. In addition to the on-campus tasks of administration, relations with a diversity of downtown mining and industrial interests required constant attention.

Eardley had an abiding interest in the practical aspects of geology and was sought out as a consultant because of his wide and basic knowledge of the geology of the Western United States. From 1946 to 1949 he worked on a seasonal basis for Sinclair Oil and from 1949 to 1954 was retained by Cities Service Oil Company. He also contributed in various capacities to the development of other resources, including uranium, salt, and rock products.

As a scientist, Armand Eardley tended to paint with a broad brush, and he was well qualified to do so because of his familiarity with basic patterns and wide regional relationships. He had a way of summarizing and synthesizing the works of others which preserved their essentials, gave due credit and fitted their work into the big picture fairly and accurately.

Wherever he went, Eardley could see geologic problems and opportunities. A short visit to Alaska resulted in papers on the Yukon Valley sediments and topography. A stay in southern France produced a fresh contribution on that well-worn topic of flyshe and molasse and on the petroleum geology of the Aquitaine Basin.

He was a conservative in geological thinking. His works show that he did not "become a believer" in plate tectonics or continental drift. In his personal struggles with global matters, illustrated by papers on the relationships of North and South America (1954) and the Arctic Basin (1949), he managed without either plate tectonics or polar wandering.

Fundamentally, Eardley was a believer in vertical uplift as a primary tectonic force. His unparalleled experience in the ranges of the Rocky Mountains convinced him that the thrust faults on the margins were due to gravity sliding. It was interesting to see him attempt to translate his thinking about the "thin-skinned" Rockies to the geosynclinal Great Basin. He looked for prethrust uplifts and gave the thrusters a good run for their money.

Although Eardley's interests and publications were wide ranging, there were several subjects to which he reamined devoted during his professional career. His doctoral thesis was on the southern Wasatch Mountains and was the basis for his first four papers published from 1932 to 1934. Occasional papers on the Wasatch Range followed, the last in 1969. A longstanding interest in the Great Salt Lake is even more evident. His pioneer paper on sediments of the lake (1938) is widely quoted and basic to much subsequent work. Offshoots of his interest in the modern lake and sediments were publications on Lake Bonneville and consulting jobs and services as an expert witness in relation to exploration and utilization of the mineral resources of the briny "liquid ore body." At the time of his death, he was engaged in a significant joint study, financed by the National Science Foundation, of a deep core in the nearshore bottom sediments, which proves the existence of a succession of many lakes in the area. He lived to see the installation of great commercial enterprises on the lake and the utilization of much of his data in a practical way.

His life's work proves that he kept busy on long-range projects of many kinds. Yet he always had time to listen to the troubles of students and colleagues. He enjoyed his vacations at Camp Davies at the Eardley cabin, which he built himself. Outstanding was his willingness to go into the field with his graduate students to check their progress and keep them working effectively.

Eardley was a superb craftsman. The relation of carpentry and drafting are unmistakable in his productions. With board or paper, he always came up with something that fit, had utility, and was both understandable and economical.

Eardley was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He served as a missionary for this church in Switzerland and Germany from 1921 to 1923. At the time of his death, he was a High Priest in the 11th Ward, Monument Park Stake, Salt Lake City.

Armand Eardley is difficult to classify profesionally. He is known chiefly as a structural geologist, but this probably arises from the frequent necessity of having to fill the blanks of some survey or citation with a specialty of one sort or another. In addition to structure and tectonics, his bibliography has important titles in sedimentology, stratigraphy, geomorphology, Pleistocene geology, and the geology of oil and other mineral products.

Eardley may have resented the classification of men of his type as being of the classical school. He could be proud of being a geologist, which is more than being a mineralologist, paleontologist, or seismologist. He was a student of the Earth.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

The A. J. Eardley papers were given to the University of Utah by Earley's son, Michael, in 1991. This collection, which spans over thirty years, from the 1940s to the 1970s, appears to be just a small sampling of Eardley's work. Although he focused his studies on areas in the Intermountain West, he also did quite a bit of work on the Arctic. Some notes of his work in Ethiopia and France are also included here.

This collection has been divided into three sections. Box one contains the first section, which consists of personal material (his memorial and medicare information) and textbook material. The textbook material includes information on his last textbook Science of the Earth and on an environmental textbook he was planning to write, based on the environmental section in Science of the Earth.

The second section, found in boxes two through five, consists of sucject files which, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around 20 percent of these subject files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The rest of the subject files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes about the places he was studying.

The third section of this collection, boxes six through eight, and four folders in the map case, contain Eardley's map collection, many of which are hand-drawn by Eardley. In the front of each folder from which the maps have been removed, there is a list giving the map titles and locations. If photographs and publications have been removed, the folder will include a list of these as well.

Boxes nine and ten were added at a later date and contain writings by Eardley and others, correspondence, maps, and other materials.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Restrictions on Use

The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library’s Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.

Preferred Citation

Collection Name, Collection Number, Box Number, Folder Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Acquisition Information

Boxes 1-8 and all map case materials were donated in 1991 (4 linear feet, not including map case folders). Boxes 9-10 were donated in May 2006 (0.75 linear feet).

Processing Note

Processed by Jennifer Broadbent in 1993.

Addendum processed by Lisa DeMille in 2006.

Separated Materials

Photographs were transferred to the Multimedia Division of Special Collections (P0539).

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

Personal and Textbook MaterialReturn to Top

This series contains Eardley's memorial, medical bills, and medicare information for himself and his wife, Norma. It also includes information on his last textbook Science of the Earth and an environmental textbook he was planning to write.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
1 1
Memorial
1 2-5
Medicare
1967-1979
1 6-7
Science of the Earth
Correspondence, review, and advertisement.
1969-1972
1 8
Proposed Environmental Science Textbook
Correspondence, outline, etc.
1972
1 9
"Environmental Science"
Part four from Science of the Earth.

Subject FilesReturn to Top

The subject files, for the most part, use Eardley's own organization and titles. Around twenty percent of these files are newspaper and magazine clippings, largely about environmental issues. This may be information that he was collecting for his environmental textbook. The remaining files contain some of his articles and papers (including notes and rough drafts), a few of his students' papers, and various geological notes of the places he was studying.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
2 1-5
Air Pollution
Clippings, research proposal, "Common Carrier," "Air Pollution," "Interim Plan for Air Pollution Abatement, Salt Lake Valley," "Armistice on Air Pollution-Salt Lake City."
1970; 1972
2 6
Alaskan Pipeline
2 7-11
Arctic Oil and Gas Reserves
Clippings, presentation correspondence and outline, "Oil and Gas Reserves in the Siberian Shelf," "Arctic Oil and Gas Reserves: A Preliminary Estimate."
1970-1972
2 12
Atomic Reactors
2 13
Auto Exhaust Problems
1971-1972
2 14
Bentonite, Harris Canyon
2 15-16
Biarritz Geologic Notes
1943-1945
2 17-19
Bituminous Sandstone
"The Beneficial Use of Water for the Recovery of Oil from Bituminous Sands" and road logs.
1964-1969
2 20
Black Rock Meadows
1947-1948
2 21
Blood Groups
1933-1963
2 22
Bryner Survey
1963
2 23-27
Camp Davis Area
Correspondence, field notes, and student reports.
1939-1953
2 28
Camp Williams
1968
2 29
Caribou Structure
1947
2 30
Centennial Structure
Correspondence, drawings, and maps.
1964
2 31
"Centennial Structure"
1947
2 32
Church Buttes Field
1949
2 33
Cliff Creek Structure
1947-1956
2 34
Crestone Claims Colorado
1954-1956
2 35
Cumberland, Wyoming
1956-1957
3 1
DDT, Mercury, etc.
1972
3 2
Dams
1971
3 3
Degradable Materials
1972
3 4
Dillon, Montana
1947-1948
3 5
Driggs Anticline
1949-1957
3 6
Early Conservationists
3 7
Earthquake Environment
3 8
Ecology Problems
1972
3 9
Endangered Species Materials
1971-1972
3 10
Energy Crisis
1971-1972
3 11
Erosion of Zion Canyon
1965
3 12-13
Ethiopia-Sinclair
Reports and correspondence.
1946-1947
3 14
Forests, Recreational Areas, and Wilderness
3 15
Fruita Silver Prospects
3 16
Fundamental Questions
1971-1972
3 17
Garland Pool, Wyoming
1956
3 18-19
Gas Hills Uranium
Airborne anomaly location maps, correspondence, and reports.
3 20
Geochemical Surveys
1972
3 21
Goshen
1967
3 22
Granite Creek Structure
1945-1951
3 23-25
Green River Logging Project
Clippings and Skyline-Robertson corehole nos. 1-2.
1959-1968
3 26
Harrisville Brick Company
1940-1958
3 27
Hebgen Trip
1959-1960
3 28
Henrys and Hebgen Lakes
3 29
Ice Cap Tectonics
3 30
Idaho-Wyoming Fold and Thrust
1966-1967
3 31
"Idaho-Wyoming Fold and Thrust Belt: Its Division and an Analysis of its Origin"
3 32
Industries Affected
1971
3 33
Jackson Hole Reports-Sinclair
1944-1945
3 34
Kyanite
1956
3 35
Lake Pollution
1972
3 36
Lane Use
1972
3 37
Lead and Zinc Smelting Industry in Utah
1972
3 38-39
Lima Anticline
1947-1951
3 40
Lisbon Field
1958
3 41
Little Mountain
1966-1968
3 42
Lonetree-Burnt Fork Area
1950
3 43
Lyman, Wyoming
4 1
Madison County Structure
1947-1948
4 2
Manti-Sterling
1954-1957
4 3
Maughan Drilling
1969
4 4
McCarthy Mountain
4 5-6
Metallogenic Provinces
"Igneous Provinces of the Western Cordillera and their Relation to Melatiferous Provinces."
1955
4 7
F. S. Turneaure, "Metallogenic Provinces and Epochs"
4 8-9
Montana Foothills
Base maps of the Thrust Belt area and township plats showing seismograph lines.
1953-1954
4 10-11
Montana Stratigraphy
"Upper Part of the Phosphoria Formation, Sawtooth Peak, Beaverhead County, Montana."
1947-1949
4 12
Mosquito Creek
1952
4 13
Mountain Building
1957
4 14
Nevada Tertiary
1954
4 15
Ocean Pollution
1972
4 16
Oil Spills
4 17
Ophir Canyon
1967
4 18-19
Orogenic Nomenclature
"Stratigraphic Nomenclature in the United States."
1933
4 20-21
Parley's Quarry
Field chemical analysis.
1967-1972
4 22
Pine Springs Archaeological Site
1964
4 23
Population Growth
1972
4 24-25
Portland Cement Company of Utah
1967-1972
4 26
Power Plants
1972
4 27
Rates Denudation
Correspondence, notes, and "Rates of Denudation in the High Plateaus of Southwestern Utah."
1966
4 28
River Pollution
1971-1972
4 29
San Rafael Swell
1951-1957
4 30
Hyrum Schneider
1955
4 31
Sinclair Reports
1944
4 32
Springville
1968
4 33
Stansbury Island
1967
4 34-36
Tar Sands
Correspondence and letter from John Morgan.
1965-1969
4 37
Timpie Springs
1968
4 38
Twin Bridges, Montana
1955-1968
4 39-40
Uranium Production
Notes, "Relative Costs of Fuels for Generation Electricity," and "Production and Consumption of Uranium: An Outsider's Estimate."
1955, 1965
4 41
Urban Sprawl
1972
5 1-2
Volcanic Rocks
Correspondence and notes.
1957-1958
5 3
Wahweap Gravels
1957
5 4
Wasatch Region, Manuscript
1949
5 5
Waste Disposal
5 6
Water Resources
1972
5 7
Western Cordillera
1967
5 8-10
Western Oil Shale
Correspondence.
1970-1971
5 11
Wetlands
1972
5 12-13
Zion, Bryce, Cedar Breaks, Capitol Reef
1968
5 14-15
Zion National Park
1965-1969
5 16
Miscellaneous
1959-1972

MapsReturn to Top

This is the largest series of the collection and is housed in three flat boxes and four folders in the map case. Many hand-drawn maps by Eardley are included.

Container(s) Description Dates
Box item
6 1
(Unititled) Africa Craton, North America Craton, South America Craton, East Pacific Ridge, Eugeoshncline
6 2
(Untitled) Africa, Craton S.A., N.A., Eugeogyncline, Folded Miogeosyncline
6 3
(Untitled) Craton, Mendocino, Murray, Shirley, Clarion, Clipperton, etc.
6 4
(Untitled) R43E--R44E--T5N, M. L. Manning
6 5
(Untitled) Salt Lake Meridian, Kaysville, R1S R1E T4N T3N
6 6
(Untitled) T6S, T5S, T4S, McCartney Mountain, Dubois Ranch, Nelson Ranch, Beaverhead Rock, Big Hold River, Twin Bridges, Sheridan, Ruby Mountains, etc.
Two copies.
6 7
(Untitled) T. 37 N., Gros Ventr, Grayback Ridge, Wyoming
6 8
Aeromagnetic Profiles across Portions of Glacier, Pondera and Flathead Counties, Montana by Frost Airborne Survey Corporation, Tulsa, Oklahoma
1952
6 9
Bouguer Anomalies and Geologic Structure West of Lisbon Valley, Utah, United States Geological Society (hereafter USGS) Professional Paper 316 Plate 9
6 10
Bouguer Gravity Anomaly map of the Lisbon Valley Area, Utah and Colorado, USGS Professional Paper 316 Plate 7
6 11
Camp Williams Site NW 1/4 Section 16, T5S, R1W
Two copies.
6 12
Cross Section
Two copies.
1972
6 13
Cross Sections of Northern Ethiopia
6 14
Cross Sections through Gamma II Claims
Two copies.
6 15
Development of the Western Cordillera
6 16
Division No. 4
1971
6 17
Division No. 4 Operation Status
Two copies.
1972
6 18
Figure 1. Geologic Map of Bituminous Sandsstone Deposits Near Quarries of the Rock Asphalt Company of Utah, Figure 4. Cross Section along Line A-A on Figure 1. by Clifford N. Homes, Ben M. Page, and Paul Averitt
1948
6 19
Gamma II Claims, Portland Cement Company of Utah
Two copies.
6 20
Generalized Geologic Map of the Lisbon Valley Area, Utah and Colorado, USGS
6 21
Geologic Column in That Part of Southwestern Wyoming Shown in Pl. III (3694 No. 56-07)
6 22
Geological Map of the Gravelly Range Area, Madison County, Montana
6 23
Goshen Quarry Site T95, R1W, Utah County
Two copies.
6 24
Imperium Neptune REgis
Crossing equator certificate.
6 25
Interpace Shale Quarry near Mouth of Big Cottonwood Canyon for Utah Portland Cement Company
Two copies.
6 26
Lease Holdings of Resource Ventures in Lison Valley Area, San Juan County, Utah
Two copies.
6 27
Limestone and Shale Sites Investigated for Portland Cement Company of Utah
6 28
Little Mountain Great Blue Limestone Section
Two copies.
6 29
Little Mountain Prospect
Five copies.
6 30
Lonetree-Burnt Fork Area, Utah and Wyoming, Reconnaissance Survey
1950
6 31
Map and Section of Wahweap Sand and Gravel Deposit, Kane County, Utah
6 32
Nature of Shearing and Westward Shifting of North American Plate
6 33
North Pole to Arctic Circle
6 34
North Pole to Arctic Circle with Shelves, Platforms, Basins, and Folding Zones
6 35
Northeast Utah
6 36
Northwest Quarter, Utah
6 37
Proposed Placer Claims in Section 27, T5S, R4W, Tooele County
Two copies.
6 38
Reconnaissance Map, Topography, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming Shoshone Quadrangle, USGS
1908
6 39
Relation of East Fork to Present Quarry, Parleys Canyon, Portland Cement Company of Utah
6 40
Relation of Sedimentary Units of Present Quarry to Old Quarry
Refer to report of 17 July 1967 for description of Units.
1967
6 41
Southeast Quarter, Utah
6 42
Structure Contour Map of the Cumberland Area, Uinta and Lincoln Counties, Wyoming
6 43
Structure Contour Map on Eroded Charles-Madison, FM Northwest Montana and Southeast Alberta, Canada
Referred to in 27 July 1953 letter from Rolf Varland.
6 44
Southwest Quarter, Utah
6 45
Timpie Springs Site T1S, R7W Tooele County
Two copies.
6 46
Topography Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, Lake Quadrangle USGS
1906
6 47
Township T2S, R6W Tooele County
Two copies.
6 48
Yellowstone National Park, Revised, NPYel7006
1956
7
Unnamed Charts and Maps
item
8 1
(Untitled) Map Showing a Portion of Montana
8 2
(Untitled) West Cross Section, East Cross Section, Highway 73, Clay Pit, NM 1/4 Section 16, T5S, R1W
Two copies.
8 3
Area No. 1, Navajo, Northeast Arizona, T. B. R.
8 4
Byron A. Ray Gypsum Property, Gunnison Plateau, Utah, by A. J. Eardley
Two copies.
1972
8 5
Datum--Tensleep Sandstone, Lloyd G. Gray, Geologist, C. A. Johnson Building, Alpine
1980
8 6
Geologic Map, Henry's Lake Mountains, Montana and Idaho Plate III, Surveyed in 1949
8 7
Geologic Map and Sections of the Cumberland Area, Uinta and Lincoln Counties, Wyoming, compiled by A. J. Eardley
1953
8 8
Geologic Map of the Centennial Structure
1947
8 9
Hanksville Q, State of Utah
1967
8 10
Horseshoe Creek Anticline, by John Bayless and A. J. Eardley, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Two copies.
1949
8 11
Index Map of the Uinta Basin in Utah and Colorado
8 12
Map Showing Anticlines on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Montana, by Eugene Stebinger, USGS Bulletin 641 Plate XXV
8 13
Mineral Survey No. 4847, Utah Land District Plat of the Claim of W. L. Ellerbeck et. al. Known as the Kaolin Placer Mining Claim
8 14
Montana Hogan Quadrangle, Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army Progressive Military Map, Advance Sheet 180-S-E/2
1943
8 15
Mosquito Creek Anticline, Teton County, Wyoming, Mapped on Aerial Photos by A. J. Eardley
Two copies.
1948
8 16
NE-SW Cross Section of the Lisbon Structure, San Juan County, Utah
8 17
NE 1/4 Section 36 T4N-R2E Morgan County, Utah
8 18
Neilson Construction Company/Oscar E. Chytraus So./R. Lamont Stevens T2S R6W 1-970
8 19
Oil and Gas Development Map Showing Leasehold Acreage of the Resource Ventures Corporation, East Central Utah, Extract Map of Map U-38
1960
8 20
Parleys Terrace
8 21
Pehrson Limestone Prospect
Two copies.
8 22
Plate IV--Section along Line B-B' Plate III, Plate V--Section along Lines C-C' and D-D' Plate III, Plate VI--Section along Line E-E' Plate III
8 23
Pleasant Grove Shale Belt
Three copies.
8 24
Proposed Subdivision of the Eardley Property, Alpine City, Utah
8 25
Rattlesnake Anticline, Montana, G. K. Brasher
Four copies.
8 26
Reconnaissance of Montana Foothills Belt, by A. J. Eardley
1953
8 27
Section 10 TP2S R 2W, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Granite
8 28
Section 13 TP2S R 2W, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Granite
8 29
Section 16 TP2S R 1W, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Granite
8 30
Section 17 TP2S R 1W, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Granite
8 31-34
Sections 28-31 T4N-R3E Morgan County, Utah
8 35
Setting before Thrusting/Setting after Thrusting, Cretaceous Basin, Snow Line Anticline
Referred to in 19 February 1951 letter to Tom Hiestand.
8 36
Sketch Map of Gypsum Splendor, Gypsum Deposit NE 1/4 Section 22, R1E, T15S, Utah, by A. J. Eardley
Two copies.
1972
8 37
Structure Contour Map of the Willow Creek Anticline, J. Chivers
8 38
Structure Contour Map of Willow Creek Anticline, Teton County, Wyoming, Bonolyn J. Brown
1944
8 39
Structure Section Horseshoe Creek Anticline
8 40
Timpie Quadrangle, Utah-Tooele County, USGS
1955
8 41
USGS Hatch Rock Quadrangle, Utah, San Juan County
This map is glued to a USGS map of Lisbon Valley Quadrangle, Utah-Colorado.
1954
8 42
Utah County Plats NW 1/4 Section 7 Township 6 South, Range 3 East
8 43
Utah County Plats Section 14 Township 5 Range 1 West
8 44
Utah County Plats Sections 15, 16, 17, 18 Township 5 Range 1 West
8 45
Utah County Plats Section 22 Township 5 South Range 2 East
8 46
Utah County Plats Sections 7, 8, 9, 10 Townsip 5 Range 1 West
8 47
Utah County Plats Section 8 Township 5 South Range 2 East
8 48
Utah County Plats SW 1/4 Section 6 Township South Range 3E
mapcase-folder
1 1
(Untitled) Western United States
1 2
Bayonne No. 3, Institut Geographique National Quadrillage Kilometrique Projection Lambert III Zone Sud
1 3
Bayonne No. 7 (same as above)
1 4
Geologic Reconnaissance from Trimetrigon Photos of Northern Ethiopia, Sinclair Petroleum Company
1 5
Index to Topographic Maps of the Geological Survey, United States, Revised
1968
1 6
Jordan Narrows Quadrangle, Utah, 7.5 min. Series USGS
1 7
Lease Holdings of Resource Ventures on the Big Flat Structures
1958
1 8
Magna Quadrangle Utah-Salt Lake County USGS
1952
1 9
Notom 3 NE, Utah, Mapped by USGS
1952
1 10
Pacific Creek and Buffalo River Anticline, Geology by G. H. Gaul and A. J. Eardley, Assisted by A. Brown and W. Pilley
1944
1 11
Relation of Sedimentary Units of Present Quarry to Old Quarry
1967
1 12
Sinclair Wyoming Oil Company, Jackson Hole Area, Teton County, Wyoming, Geology by G. H. Gaul and A. J. Eardley
1944
1 13
Township 5 South Range 1 West of the Salt Lake Meridian, Utah District 2 Utah County
1 14
Twin Bridges Area, Montana, Preliminary Work Map Compiled by A. J. Eardley
Referred to in 18 May 1955 letter to R. P. Drury.
1955
1 15
Wyoming, Sinclair Prairie Oil Company
2 1
Ashton, Idaho; Montana; Wyoming
2 2
Bayonne Nos. 5-6, Institut Geographic National Quadrillage Kilometrique Projection Lambert III Zone Sud
2 3
Bondurant Anticline, Teton and Sublette Counties, Wyoming Plane Tabled by W. E. Pilley, A. Brown, and A. J. Eardley, Contouring by A. J. Eardley
2 4
Gallatin National Forest, U.S. Department of Agriculture
2 5
Geologic Map and Sections of Birch Creek--Sun River Region, Montana, USGS Bulletin 691 Plate XXIV
1918
2 6
Maps Showing Structure, Overburden, and Thickness for a Rich Oil-Shale Sequence in the Eocene Green River Formation, East-Central Uinta Basin, Utah and Colorado, by W. B. Cashion
Oil-shale lease study, Utah sites, were originally attached to this map.
2 7
Parleys Canyon Plant, File No. U-012, Portland Cement Company of Utah
2 8
Structure Contour Map of the Montana Plains, by C. E. Dobbin and C. E. Erdmann, USGS
1946
2 9
Twin Bridges Area, Montana, Preliminary Work Map Compiled by A. J. Eardley
Referred to in 18 May 1955 letter to R. P. Drury. Two copies.
1955
3 1
(Untitled) Map of Portion of Montana
3 2
Bedford Quadrangle, Wyoming, by William W. Riley
1958
3 3
Geology of the Bituminous Sandstone Deposits Near Sunnyside, Carbon County, Utah, by Clifford N. Holmes, Ben M. Page, and Paul Averitt
1948
3 4
Structural Cross Section, Bituminous Sandstone Deposits, Sunnyside, Carbon County, Utah, Sunnyside Development Corp.
3 5
Beaverhead National Forest (East Half), Montana Principal Meridian, Montana, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service
1940
3 6
Beaverhead National Forest, Montana, Principal Meridian, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service
1947
3 7
North and Central Africa, Published by the War Office
1941
3 8
Preliminary Geologic Map of Southwest Montana, University of Michigan Thesis Studies
Two copies.
1947-1948
4 1
Geologic Map of East Central Utah and a Portion of Western Colorado Showing Holdings of Harry Ruyster
4 2
Geologic Map of the Lima Anticline, Beaverhead County, Montana, by A. J. Eardley
1946
4 3
Geologic Map of Utah, by William Lee Stokes
1961-1962
4 4
Structure Contour Map of the Lima Anticline, Beaverhead County, Montana, by E. J. Eardley
4 5
Tertiary Stratigraphy of the Jackson Hole Area, Northwest Wyoming, Oil and Gas Investigation, Preliminary Chart 27
4 6
Twin Bridges Area, Montana, Preliminary Work Map, Compiled by A. J. Eardley
Referred to in 18 May 1955 letter to R. P. Drury.
1955

General MaterialsReturn to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
9 1
Correspondence
1954-1966
9 2
"Fragmentation of Western North America in Late Cenozoic Time"
9 3
"Gypsum Dunes and Evaporite History of the Great Salt Lake Desert"
1962-1963
9 4
"Primary Vertical Uplifts in Arizona and Southern Nevada"
1961, 1965
9 5
"Willard Thrust and the Cache Uplift"
1968
9 6-7
Essays and Reports
1948-1971
9 8
Jordan Steam Electric Station
1949
9 9
Lieu Lands
1962-1969
10 1
Maps and Charts
1951-1965
10 2
Mineral Land Section Committee
1958-1964
10 3
Miscellaneous

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Geology, Structural
  • Geology--West (U.S.)
  • Geology--West (U.S.)--Maps
  • Mineral industries--West (U.S.)
  • Pollution--Environmental aspects--Utah

Personal Names

  • Eardley, A. J. (Armand John), 1901- --Archives

Corporate Names

  • University of Utah--Faculty

Form or Genre Terms

  • Articles
  • Clippings
  • Maps