Estimate Request for the image
V01208
To make a request for several images, go back to the
Picture Library
and add them to the Light Box.
Add to my light box
View my light box
Ref :
V01208
Theme :
Looking at Earth - Mountains - Hills - Snow - Ice
(539 images)
Title :
Spanish Peaks, Sangre de Cristo Range, Colorado
Caption :
The Spanish Peaks, on the eastern flank of the Sangre de Cristo range, abruptly rise 7,000 feet above the western Great Plains. Settlers, treasure hunters, trappers, gold and silver miners have long sighted on these prominent landmarks along the Taos branch of the Santa Fe trail. Well before the westward migration, the mountains figured in the legends and history of the Ute, Apache, Comanche, and earlier tribes. ;Las Cumbres Españolas; are also mentioned in chronicles of exploration by Spaniards including Ulibarri in 1706 and later by de Anza, who eventually founded San Francisco (California). This exceptional view, captured by the crew of Space Shuttle mission STS108, portrays the Spanish Peaks in the context of the southern Rocky Mountains. Uplift of the Sangre de Cristo began about 75 million years ago and produced the long north-trending ridges of faulted and folded rock to the west of the paired peaks. After uplift had ceased (~26 to 22 million years ago), the large masses of igneous rock (granite, granodiorite, syenodiorite) that form the Peaks were emplaced (Penn, 1995-2001). East and West Spanish Peaks are ;stocks;bodies of molten rock that intruded sedimentary layers, cooled and solidified, and were later exposed by erosion. East Peak (E), at 12,708 ft is almost circular and is about 5 1/2 miles long by 3 miles wide, while West Peak (W), at 13,623 ft is roughly 2 3/4 miles long by 1 3/4 miles wide. Great dikeslong stone wallsradiate outward from the mountains like spokes of a wheel, a prominent one forms a broad arc northeast of East Spanish Peak. As the molten rock rose, it forced its way into vertical cracks and joints in the sedimentary strata; the less resistant material was then eroded away, leaving walls of hard rock from 1 foot to 100 feet wide, up to 100 feet high, and as long as 14 miles. Dikes trending almost east-west are also common in the region.
to specify how you want to use these images. You can also send your request by
E-mail
To make a request for several images, go back to the
Picture Library
and add them to the Light Box.
Image(s) use :
----------- Specify usage --------------
Advertising
Advertising in Press
Press
Publishing
CD Rom-Internet
Movie-Video-TV
Non-commercial
Private use
Other, please specify
Reproduction format of the image in the final document :
----------- Specify format ---------------
Up to 1/8 page
Up to 1/4 page
Up to 1/2 page
Up to 3/4 page
Up to full page
Double page
Front or Back cover
Other, please specify
Print run of the document on which the image is reproduced :
----------- Specify print run ------------
1 to 100
101 to 500
501 to 1000
1001 to 2000
2001 to 2500
2501 to 5000
5001 to 10 000
10 001 to 25 000
25 001 to 50 000
50 001 to 100 000
100 001 to 500 000
500 001 to 1 000 000
Other, please specify
Number of consecutive uses :
--------- Specify number of uses -------
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Other, please specify
If image is reproduced in the Press, please specify number of titles :
If image is reproduced as a poster
please specify size of the poster :
------- Specify poster format ---------
Up to 50 x 60 cm
Up to 80 x 120 cm
Up to 240 x 300 cm
Up to 360 x 480 cm
Other, please specify
Give all useful information or specify the use of the image(s) in this box :