States
Counties
Month
Day
5 Matching Results
Results open in a new window/tab.
Results:
1 - 5 of
5
Eroded Clay Site on Charles Rackley Farm
Photograph of "Eroded Clay site. Good condition, natural reseeding of bluestem mixture on formerly cultivated field. Renfrew-Vernon Complex - 2-5% severely eroded (5-CD-4-field #)."
Date:
November 1965
Creator:
Stidham, N.
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Shallow Prairie Site In Excellent Condition on Mande Starr Farm
Photograph of shallow prairie site in excellent condition on Mande Starr farm. The back of the photograph proclaims, "Vernon-Collinsville-Sogn Complex Tall grasses: Little bluestem, Big Bluestem, Indiangrass – some sideoats grama, Persimmon and Hawthorn bushes on the slopes."
Date:
November 1965
Creator:
Stidham, N.
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Range Overseeding on Good Condition class on Vernon-Lucien, Red Clay Prairie
Photograph of "Good Condition class on Vernon-Lucien, Red Clay Prairie. Tall grass overseeded with "Pasture Dream" type drill – no seedbed preparation – other than clean furrow made by 4" sweep on planter chute. Six years old – Indiangrass heading."
Date:
November 2, 1965
Creator:
Stidham, Neal
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Shallow Savannah Range in Excellent Condition on Tom Denyer Pasture
Photograph of hallow savannah Range in excellent Condition on Tom Denyer pasture. The back of the photograph proclaims, "Shallow Savannah excellent Condition. Darnell Stonyloam [sic] soil in Tom Denyer Pasture. Aerial sprayed 2#/ac '58 2# 2-4-5-T 1959. Big [bluestem] & little bluestem & Indiangrass dominate the site."
Date:
November 1965
Creator:
Stidham, Neal
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Loamy Prairie Excellent Condition
Photograph of a loamy prairie range site used for hay meadow-bluestem in excellent condition. The back of the photograph proclaims, "Loamy Prairie Excellent Condition. Used for hay meadow – bluestem maintained by cutting high early and not overused."
Date:
November 1965
Creator:
unknown
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History