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Map No. 1. Rio Colorado of the West,  Joseph C. Ives, 1585 - Geologic Map of the Grand Canyon
Map No. 1. Rio Colorado of the West,  Joseph C. Ives, 1585 - Geologic Map of the Grand Canyon
Load image into Gallery viewer, Map No. 1. Rio Colorado of the West,  Joseph C. Ives, 1585 - Geologic Map of the Grand Canyon
Load image into Gallery viewer, Map No. 1. Rio Colorado of the West,  Joseph C. Ives, 1585 - Geologic Map of the Grand Canyon

1858 Map No. 1. Rio Colorado of the West, explored by 1st Lieut. Joseph C. Ives

The Vintage Map Shop, Inc.

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Geological Map No. 2 - Explorations and Surveys. War Department. Map No. 2. Rio Colorado of the West, explored by 1st Lieut. Joseph C. Ives, Topl. Engrs. under the direction of the Office of Explorations and Surveys. A.A. Humphreys, Capt. Topl. Engrs. in Charge, by order of the Hon. John B. Floyd, Secretary of War.

By: Joseph C. Ives Drawn by: Frederick Wilhelm von Egloffstein

Date of Original: 1858 (dated) Washington D.C.

Original Size: 14.5 x 34.25 inches (37 x 87 cm)

The is a fine print reproduction of the earliest geologic map of the Grand Canyon from the report of Joseph C. Ives; the first European American known to reach the river within Grand Canyon. The information shown in the map pre-dates the John Wesley Powell expedition of 1869.

This spectacular map shows the Grand Canyon in a wash of colors, representing the geologic time periods of the Cretaceous, Triassic, Carboniferous, and Tertiary, to name a few. Throughout the map are notations of peaks, water sources, forests, lagoons, Native American villages, ruins, and old trails. A key below the distance scale distinguishes the line of exploration, camps, and astronomical stations that can be traces throughout the map.

As described on the National Park Service website concerning the exploration history of the Grand Canyon and detailed within this map; “Army First Lieutenant Joseph Christmas Ives of the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers took on the adventure. He navigated up river using a fifty-foot long sternwheel steamboat, the Explorer. His plan was to steam up the Colorado River from the known into the unknown. He crashed just below Black Canyon, not yet in Grand Canyon itself, but continued upriver for another thirty miles in a skiff. Continuing on foot, his overland journey took him down into the canyon at Diamond Creek, today part of the Hualapai Indian Reservation. He is thus credited as the first European American known to reach the river within Grand Canyon.”

Inventory #11162

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