Title taken from front. Men working at Alaska Engineering Commission railroad warehouse, Anchorage, Alaska, with freight on platform at left and handcar on tracks in center. Also from front: "A.E.C. G1328." An Alaska Engineering Commission photo....
Title supplied by cataloger. Alaska Railroad, Curry to Cantwell. Passenger train stopped at station, probably Curry Hotel. Several passengers stand on platform. Before 1940. 4x5 contact print, 4x5 neg
Title taken from image. Looking down at an Alaska Railroad train and a crowd standing on the platform of the Anchorage, Alaska railway station. The crowd has come to meet the Matanuska Valley colonists arriving on the train. Printing on railroad...
Photograph shows a large number of recently disembarked soldiers, standing on the railroad platform adjacent to the train. A series of flatbed cars carrying army trucks is visible in the background. Original photograph size: 3 1/2" x 4 1/2".
Title taken from caption. View of volcanic ash deposit with Platform Ridge in background as seen from National Geographic Expedition base camp in what was later designated Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska. 1919. Photographer: A.J. Basinger.
Three dogs in harness pull a wheeled platform holding a barrel of water; a line of tents and boats stretch out behind to the north Photographer's number 15
The world's first single-leg drilling platform, called a monopod, was designed for Marathon Oil company and its partner to be used in developing the Trading Bay Field in Alaska. Seven foot model shows portions of the com=lately equipped platform...
Designed to overcome the 30-foot tides, crushing ice, and strong currents of Alaska's Cook Inlet, this "monopod" drilling rig owned by Marathon Oil Company and Union Oil Company of California is positioned over the partner's discovery well at the...
Pontoons were flooded to settle the platform to permanent position some 60 miles south of Anchorage, Alaska, and three miles from the west shore of Cook Inlet. Submarine pipe lines connected to the pontoons carry to shore where the 20%...
The first leg of the monopod's journey to Cook Inlet, Alaska, required precise maneuvering under numerous bridges across the Columbia River. Pontoons, 24' in diameter by 174', which provided floatation, now rest on the inlet floor and have storage...
The platform was christened "The Trading Bay". After launching it was towed 2,000 miles via the Columbia River and Pacific Ocean to Cook Inlet, Alaska.
Design by Brown & Root of Houston and built at American Pipe and Construction Company at Vancouver, Wash., shipyards, the Trading Bay platform was towed to its permanent location in Cook Inlet, Alaska, for completion. The rugged jacket section was...
Title from image. Group of men support a large pipe on a platform at top of dock. Rope attached to platform extends out of frame. More pipes are stacked on dock. A dog looks on from porch.
Dedication ceremony for the Brotherhood Bridge at the Mendenhall River, Juneau, Monday, October 18, 1965 [program]. Historical Notes on the Lower Mendenhall River Crossing, Data on Brotherhood Bridge, Text for Historical Marker, [Geological and...