What do you see? What might this picture show us?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit 4: Miners. THE DECADE OF THE 1850S Slow-Fur trade was over and there were few settlers Uncertain-no mines were open and farmland was plentiful Uneventful.
Advertisements

Mineral Resources S E C T I O N
Miners, Ranchers and Cowhands
Liz LaRosa 7 th Grade Science.  Mining is extracting ore or minerals from the ground  An ore is a natural material with a high concentration of economically.
There’s gold in them thar hills! Equipment like picks, shovels and pans were used in Placer Mining Panning for Gold Placer Mining was used to extract.
BY SAM O’BRIEN NEVADA: A BOOM AND BUST EXPERIENCE.
ShaftsandTunnelsShaftsandTunnelsShaftsandTunnelsShaftsandTunnels By Gillian LaRochelle, Eric Laudner, Jacob Phillips and Emily Scatchard.
Civil War Photography by Sam Burris. Methods ● Wet-plate photography o cameras were bulky and difficult to maneuver o used lots of dangerous chemicals.
Montana By Hatcher Childress. Landforms & geographical features Rivers and Lakes Rocky Mountains Great Plains The west The east Largest lake -flathead.
Mining in Utah.
Using Mineral Resources (pages 80–85) Using Mineral Resources (pages 80–85)
Sutter’s Mill Gold found 1848 Tried to hid discovery San Francisco Prospectors bombarded city 60,000 residence by 1860.
Mining Matt Baugh. Definition Mining-noun is the extraction of mineral ores or fossil fuels from the ground.
Slide 1 picture of Chile’s flag and slide 7 picture of copper Wikepedia.org Slide 5 political map of South America
Rights and Responsibilities of Children Mrs. Pousley’s Social Studies 3.
What is Animal Photography? How can I become an animal photographer??
Working and Living Conditions During Industrialization
Water Shapes the Land Objective: Explain how running water erodes the land. Water from precipitation soaks into the ground, evaporates, or flows.
Photographic Transitions. Polaroid Land Camera, 1947.
Art as Document. Part of the Realist movement: artist sought to depict the realities of modern life Empiricism: Evidence! Proof! The scientific method.
Natural Resources Chapter 11 Section 1.3Chapter 11 Section 1.3.
1. 1. What do you notice in this image?. 2. What do you think this is?
He took photographs of people in their homes to make the wealthy part of society aware of the difficulties of the poor.
Miners and Ranchers. Westward Movement The growing industrial economy in the east needed the deposits of gold, silver, and copper found in the west. Many.
Mining Notes.
Title Slide Company name Logo Group Members Name of presentation.
Naica, Mexico – Cave of Crystals. Scientists rest in a cooling tent at an underground base camp outside the Cave of Crystals. The cavern's combination.
Mining, Ranching, & Native Americans Changes in the American Frontier.
1. What do you see in this image? 2. What kind of source do you think it is?
What symbol is portrayed here? What does this symbol often represent?
1. giving the photo context Sometimes it’s what you can’t see in an image that draws you into it as much as (if not more than) what you can see.
MINERALS ARE SOURCES OF METALS FOR CARS AND AIRPLANES QUARTZ AND FELDSPAR FOR GLASS Minerals are valuable.
Zoom In-- Virginia History. Tell what you see and what questions will you ask to get the big picture? What might primary resources tell us about Virginia.
Newspapers America's historic newspaper pages from
The Earth 26-May-11. True or False? 1)The Earth is made up of the crust and mantle. 2)The outer part of the Earth is cracked into plates. 3)The UK is.
Agenda: O Big Picture Questions 1. Trace the path of silver around the world. 2. Describe and account for the differing outcomes of European expansion.
1. What do you see? 2. What kind of source do you think this is?
Open Mining vs Underground Mining March 19th World Geography.
Chapter 11 Section 1 Miners and Ranchers By: Dalton Paul Troehler, Patrick Michael McCowen, & Christian Shane Ward.
Slide show 2 Session 2.
Sample Eastern Sustainable Development Project
continued on next slide
Indiana U t Wendy Balmer
Mineral and Mining vocabulary
Where do organisms live?
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                
What can we learn from careful reading of an image?
Why do people live near volcanoes?
continued on next slide
continued on next slide
Labor and Unions During Industrialization
What can we learn from careful reading of an image?
Where do organisms live?
"שינוק", אלוף העולם בדמקה לאדם ולמכונה זיו בן-אליהו
Images of the Great Depression ( )
What can we learn from careful reading of an image?
Photographs are the property of
What is Mining?.
Presentation Title Slide
To be used as an introduction to the discussion lesson
Liz LaRosa 5th Grade Science
Mining.
What can we learn from careful reading of an image?
Who is the intended audience? When and where was it created?
with all of your first names, last initials.
continued on next slide
For More Details:

continued on next slide

Presentation transcript:

What do you see? What might this picture show us?

List as many details as you can from this portion of the picture.

Now what do you see in this picture?

What evidence supports your claim from the previous slide?

What claim can you make about this person?

What type of document is this What type of document is this? Add several more details about this photograph to your list.

Silver mining: Timothy O'Sullivan documents the activities of the mines in Virginia City, Nevada, in 1867 900ft underground, O'Sullivan photographed the miners in tunnels, shafts, and lifts. During the winter of 1867-68, in Virginia City, Nevada, he took the first underground mining pictures in America. Deep in mines where temperatures reached 130 degrees, O'Sullivan took pictures by the light of magnesium wire in difficult circumstances.