This year's group trip to the Owyhee was a great success. I, with much help from everyone, filled in some gaps in the map and the stratigraphy; we all found some new stuff; explored some new areas; acquired valuable field data; and met some very cool people. I am madly compiling the gigpans I took and just remembered that I needed to reduce the GPS data for the boulder measurements. Just got that done. Here are some screen shots:
Bunny's Bar:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhdbxMw_n6YYo4KuYirtMhOc0bQQB_5aNONNQ7rnIkNK1vBPsTSpvGRKlzcjhsbu5MFIzI9tZj6HxvsFK3LpnizI7Na-aenqS88oJYq4gniR2RHome0WkpcNjEdR9pxHfmRClZtZ4SYro0/s320/6-2-2009+12-34-46+PM.png)
Artillery bar:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBabvJwr91QsCkanj6G2Wj6ODr4rlV7s7DwuJZUWUT07z-OF89ut6OZS6zSH6RCcry9EZPTrXHED4l04SeTCdNqGQkKVZiRbSFTgR6Zth_bSOL2CNh9sVP308ME4OBSjY6YsXfGESt36g/s320/6-2-2009+12-35-38+PM.png)
Look at each and note the very high correspondence between the two types of data--LiDAR and High-Precision GPS. It is a whole new world. Don't fall off.
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