• UMCES HOME
  • DONATE
  • COVID-19

Search form

  • Work with Us
    • Science communication services
    • Environmental report card production
    • Training and capacity building
    • Stakeholder Engagement
    • Careers
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Report Cards
    • Newsletters
    • Reports
    • Brochures
    • Posters
    • Papers
  • Media Library
    • Symbols
    • Graphics
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Report cards
  • Education
    • Professional Certificate
    • MEES Graduate Program
    • Short Courses
    • Initiatives
  • Blog
  • Enewsletter
  • Projects
  • About
    • Who we are
    • What we do
    • Our Mission
    • History
    • Partnerships
    • Contact
    • Land Acknowledgment Statement
  • Home
  • Media Library
Clear Filters

Lightbox (0)

Symbol Package
Warm-season grasslands in Manassas National Battlefield Park. Warm-season grasslands are ecologically diverse and provide habitat for many species of birds, insects, and small mammals
Warm-season grasslands
Pond next to Visitors' Center in Monocacy National Battlefield
Algal Bloom
Black-eyed susans (Rudbeckia hirta) at the Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Black-eyed susans
Black-eyed susans (Rudbeckia hirta) at the Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Black-eyed susans
Bush Creek, a tributary of the Monocacy River in Monocacy National Battlefield
Bush Creek
Butterfly on a black-eyed susan (Rudbeckia hirta) at the Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Butterfly on black-eyed susan
Butterfly on a black-eyed susan (Rudbeckia hirta) at the Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Butterfly on black-eyed susan
Forest in Worthington Farm in Monocacy National Battlefield
Forest in Monocacy National Battlefield
Forest in Worthington Farm in Monocacy National Battlefield
Forest in Monocacy National Battlefield
Former fenceline of osage orange (Maclura pomifera) trees on the Worthington Farm in Monocacy National Battlefield
Former fenceline
Warm-season grasslands near Bush Creek in Monocacy National Battlefield. Warm-season grasslands are ecologically diverse and provide habitat for many species of birds, insects, and small mammals
Grassy drive in warm-season grasslands
Warm-season grasslands near Bush Creek in Monocacy National Battlefield. Warm-season grasslands are ecologically diverse and provide habitat for many species of birds, insects, and small mammals
Grassy drive in warm-season grasslands
Incised stream banks on a small creek that runs into Bush Creek in Monocacy National Battlefield. Incised stream banks are caused by increased erosion when water runs off at high speed from nearby impervious surfaces
Incised stream banks
Junction of Bush Creek and Monocacy River in Monocacy National Battlefield
Junction of Bush Creek and Monocacy River
Farm fields next to the Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Moncacy National Battlefield
Railroad bridge over the Monocacy River in Monocacy National Battlefield
Monocacy River
Railroad bridge over the Monocacy River in Monocacy National Battlefield
Monocacy River
Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Visitors' Center at Monocacy National Battlefield
Warm-season grasslands near Bush Creek in Monocacy National Battlefield. Warm-season grasslands are ecologically diverse and provide habitat for many species of birds, insects, and small mammals
Warm-season grasslands
Monument to the 1st New York Light Artillery, Battery (L) (E Attached). Commander: Capt. Gilbert H. Reynolds. Location: South Reynolds Avenue, McPherson Ridge
1st New York Light Artillery, Battery (L) (E…
Devil's Den near Little Round Top, Gettysburg. This outcropping of massive igneous boulders was the site of fierce fighting on July 2, 1863, with a Confederate assault by Lt Gen James Longstreet's First Corps through this area. Conducted by the division of Maj. Gen. John Bell Hood, and including both the Texas Brigade and 3rd Arkansas, the charge was directed towards the left flank of the Union Army of the Potomac and hit Devil's Den as well as the high ground at Little Round Top. Devil's Den was defended by the Union III Corps division of Maj. Gen. David B. Birney, later reinforced by the V Corps.
Devil's Den
Battlefield fence on McPherson Ridge, Gettysburg National Military Park
Gettysburg fence
Battlefield fence on McPherson Ridge, Gettysburg National Military Park
Gettysburg fence
From NPS brochure: The Battle of Gettysburg began about 8 am to the west beyond McPherson barn as Union cavalry confronted Confederate infrantry advancing east along Chambersburg Pike. Heavy fighting spread north and south along this ridgeline as additional forces from both sides arrived.
McPherson Barn, looking northwest
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next

UMCES Links

  • Home
  • About
  • Campuses
  • News & Events
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Research
  • Press Room

Contact Info

P.O. Box 775
Cambridge, MD 21613

410-221-2048

Contact

Enewsletter

Subscribe to our enewsletter

Copyright 2023 UMCES | Privacy/Terms of Use | An Institution of the University System of Maryland