Robert W. Limbert stands behind his camera and films a large explosion pit found at the east end of the area. Two unidentified men stand on either side of him.
Robert W. Limbert used this pocket sextant thermometer-barometer-compass for his explorations into what was later named the Craters of the Moon National Monument.
Robert W. Limbert's hand-drawn map of the Cinder Butte Region located near Arco, Idaho. The map includes drawings of wagon roads, horse trails, routes traveled by Limbert, camps, volcanic craters, and a scale.
Scattered in the lava ash were hundreds of bear tracks that could be traced for miles. The rumor of a dwarf grizzly bear was one of the initial reasons why Robert W. Limbert wanted to explore the unnamed Craters of the Moon area since the mid-1910s.
Senator Jordan visits the National Reactor Testing Station Health Services Laboratory in Idaho with W. L. Ginkel, manager of the Atomic Energy Commission Idaho Operations Office.
Senator Jordan with Astronauts from Gemini III. From left to right: Senator Saltonstall (R-Massachusetts), Astronaut John Young, Senator Jordan, and Astronaut Virgil Grissom.
Senator Jordan, left, looking over the apple display in the form of the state of Idaho with Maury Sanders, of Emmett, Idaho, at the Washington Hilton Hotel.
Boise State University; Fighter pilots; Fighter planes;
Seven pilots with the Idaho Air National Guard at Gowen Field who are also Boise College students pose with a F-102 All Weather Interceptor. Pictured are Lt. Bill Miller, top; Lt. Gary Brewington in the cockpit; Lt. James Ahrens (seated) and Lt....
Spokane Scientist Elsie Hanft (left) kneels in front of a white tepee while a Native American woman and a young girl sit around it, photograph taken during an expedition to Lost Valley, near Craters of the Moon.