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Forestry, lime burning stack nearing completion, materials yard, 1938 Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1938-11-14
Close up of lime-rock after burning, materials yard, 1938 Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1938-11-14
Cave, New Discovery, raccoon scratches on soft limestone wall Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1939-09
Cave, New Discovery, gypsum flowers growing on limestone ledge Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1939-09
Forestry, one of two views of lime-stack burning, materials yard, 1938 Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1938-11-14
Forestry, one of two views of lime-stack burning, materials yard, 1938 Mammoth Cave National Park; National Park Service
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1938-11-14
Yellowstone photo album 4, page 69 Yellowstone National Park
Sedum ternatum, crevice in limestone rock near Walland, Tennessee Great Smoky Mountains National Park I-F-Pla-2582, Natural Features - Flora - Miscellaneous Plants,Sedum Ternum, Crevace in limestone rock near Walland, Tenn.
1936-04-28
Sisal plantation on the Perrine Grant, circa 1920. The United States Sisal Trust (Miami, Fla.) cleared and planted these fields on the Perrine Grant (T58S R36E). Fiber for twine was made from the sisal leaves. The plantation failed.; (Funding) Electronic reproduction. Miami, Fla. : Reclaiming the Everglades, c2000. Mode of access: World Wide Web. System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software. Digitized from photographs at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Miami, Florida.
1920
Correspondence relating to Chevelier Corporation interest in growing sugar cane (Funding) Electronic format produced as part of Reclaiming the Everglades, a collaborative project of the University of Miami, Florida International University, and the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, funded by the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Program.
Correspondence relating to sugar cane, limestone, water, and peat (Funding) Electronic format produced as part of Reclaiming the Everglades, a collaborative project of the University of Miami, Florida International University, and the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, funded by the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Program.

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