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JIM RICHARDSON

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JIM RICHARDSON

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  • Visitors compare the cone of Mt. St. Helens with an earlier photo of it before the eruptionk. Washington state, USA
    NationalGeographic_516112.jpg
  • Workers repair one of Grand Coulee dam's huge turbines.
    NationalGeographic_673578.jpg
  • Soil layers of the Palouse region of eastern Washington are revealed in a deep road cut.  More then ten layers of buried paleosoils are visible to soil scientist John Reganold of Washington State University.<br />
<br />
Contact:  John Reganold, Professor of Soil Science<br />
Washington State University<br />
Room 201, Johnson Hall<br />
Pullman, WA 99164<br />
Phone 509 335-8856<br />
Email: reganold@wsu.edu
    MM6977_070629_05251.jpg
  • Soil layers of the Palouse region of eastern Washington are revealed in a deep road cut.  More then ten layers of buried paleosoils are visible to soil scientist John Reganold of Washington State University.<br />
<br />
Contact:  John Reganold, Professor of Soil Science<br />
Washington State University<br />
Room 201, Johnson Hall<br />
Pullman, WA 99164<br />
Phone 509 335-8856<br />
Email: reganold@wsu.edu
    MM6977_070629_05251.jpg
  • Soil layers of the Palouse region of eastern Washington are revealed in a deep road cut.  More then ten layers of buried paleosoils are visible to soil scientist John Reganold of Washington State University.
    MM6977_070629_05251.jpg
  • The Reed family of Washington, Iowa has farmed their land for over three generations.  Contact Paul Reed, 1806 250th Street, Washington, Dc  52353<br />
Phone:  319 653-5520, Cell 319 863-3324<br />
Email: npkkreed@hotmail.com<br />
<br />
Family members include Cletus Reed (grandfather), Pual (Aussie hat), Nick, Kevin (father of Sam and Ava), and Ken (youngest son with beard.)
    MM6977_070827_14735.jpg
  • The Reed family of Washington, Iowa has farmed their land for over three generations.  Contact Paul Reed, 1806 250th Street, Washington, Dc  52353<br />
Phone:  319 653-5520, Cell 319 863-3324<br />
Email: npkkreed@hotmail.com<br />
<br />
Family members include Cletus Reed (grandfather), Pual (Aussie hat), Nick, Kevin (father of Sam and Ava), and Ken (youngest son with beard.)
    MM6977_070827_14735.jpg
  • Soil scientist and farmer Dave Huggins stands above one of the soils on the Washginton State University research farm outside Pullman, Washington
    MM6977_070628_04857.jpg
  • Palouse farmer John Aeschliman in his wheat field near Colfax, Washington.  The soil is the deep loess soil of the Palouse which is incredibly rich and productive, especially for wheat growing.  Aeschliman is a proponent of no-till farming that minimizes tillage.  <br />
Contact:  John Aeschliman, 201 Aeischliman Road, Colfax, WA  99111.  Phone: 509 397-3118.  Email: jeaesc@colfax.com
    MM6977_070626_04084.jpg
  • Soil scientist and farmer Dave Huggins stands above one of the soils on the Washginton State University research farm outside Pullman, Washington
    MM6977_070628_04857-2.jpg
  • Palouse farmer John Aeschliman in his wheat field near Colfax, Washington.  The soil is the deep loess soil of the Palouse which is incredibly rich and productive, especially for wheat growing.  Aeschliman is a proponent of no-till farming that minimizes tillage.  <br />
Contact:  John Aeschliman, 201 Aeischliman Road, Colfax, WA  99111.  Phone: 509 397-3118.  Email: jeaesc@colfax.com
    MM6977_070626_04084.jpg
  • Farm couple in their wheat filed late in the afternoon in the Palouse of Washington.
    Mary Jane & Nick V*.jpg
  • Logs floating in a lake at Mount St. Helens which were blown down during the volcanic eruption.
    Logs in Lake (P).jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_03905.jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_03297.jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_02787.jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_03045.jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_02787.jpg
  • The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070625_03870.jpg
  • Morning views from Steptoe Butte of the agricultural lands of the Palouse.  The Palouse of Washigton is an area of loess hills built out of wind-blown dust.  High hills are extremely fertile, with exceptional production of dryland wheat.
    MM6977_070627_04151.jpg
  • Columbia Gorge seen from the Oregon side.
    Columbia Gorge.jpg
  • Native fisherman netting for salmon on the Columbia River.
    Columbia River Fishing.jpg
  • Wheat harvest in the Palouse of Washington.
    Aerials _20110903_0001.jpg
  • Mary Jane Butters, Washington State, United States
    Mary Jane & Nick Back I.jpg