Counterpoint – Viewed from the Watchtower, Desert…
A Petrified Cascade – Viewed from the Watchtower,…
The Physical and the Spiritual Basis of Hopi Life…
Petroglyphs on the Ceiling – Watchtower, Desert Vi…
A Whirl of Glyphs – Watchtower, Desert View, Grand…
"Duck on a Rock" – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Can…
Snow Shelf – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon, A…
The Hopi House – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyo…
The Road to Nowhere – Verkamp's Visitor Center, Gr…
Verkamp's View – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyo…
Brinkmanship – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon,…
Living at the Edge – Grand Canyon Village, Grand C…
Pining Away – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon,…
A Bare-faced Lie – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Can…
Making Tracks – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon…
Oak Creek – Allens Bend Trail, Sedona, Arizona
Reaching for the Top – Allens Bend Trail, Sedona,…
Against the Grain – Allens Bend Trail, Sedona, Ari…
Chimney Rock – Sedona, Arizona
Thunder Mountain – Sedona, Arizona
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Forward Motion – Dry Creek Trailhead, Sedona, Ari…
Uplifting – Dry Creek Trailhead, Sedona, Arizona
The Colorado River – Viewed from Desert View, Gran…
Piering into the Distance – Desert View, Grand Can…
Monochrome with Colours – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
A Filigreed Screen – Desert View, Grand Canyon, Ar…
Dwarf Forest – Desert View, Grand Canyon, Arizona
The Watchtower, Take #2 – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
The Watchtower, Take #1 – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
Far Horizon – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizona
A Long Way Down – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizo…
The Exercise of the Point – Lipan Point, Grand Can…
Over the Edge – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizona
The First View – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizon…
"Hairalinas" – Sedona, Arizona
Just After Sunset – Airport Mesa, Sedona, Arizona
Just Before Sunset – Airport Mesa, Sedona, Arizona
The Back of the Butte – Courthouse Butte Trail, Se…
Rock Chimneys – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Ar…
Pinnacles – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizon…
Prickles – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizona
Fire Wood – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizon…
The Layered Look – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona,…
A Study in Ochre – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona,…
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"There's Red in Them Thar Hills" – Desert View, Grand Canyon, Arizona


Dr. Matthew Fleming "M. F." Stephenson (1802–1882) was born in Virginia. On February 25, 1836, he married Sarah Elizabeth Sumter Lyon. He was considered a Georgia geology and mineral expert, although there is no record of his having received any formal education in that field. He was one of the first collectors of lazulite, rutile, pyrophyllite, and other minerals.
Stephenson wrote various articles on his observations of minerals, as well as mound excavations in Georgia. In the 1870s, several of his articles were published by the Smithsonian Institution, including Account of Ancient Mounds in Georgia and Mounds in Bartow County near Cartersville, Georgia. These described sites he visited and the artifacts found at each, such as mica mirrors, copper vessels, and quartz. He also published a major treatise in 1871 called Geology and Mineralogy of Georgia for which he is most famous. Other published works include a pamphlet Diamonds and Precious Stones in Georgia in 1878 and a historical sketch in 1866, Report on the Lewis Mine Property, White County, Georgia.
He served as the assayer of the Dahlonega Mint in Dahlonega, Georgia in the 1840s. When the gold rush in Georgia was believed to be over, many miners headed west to join the 1849 California Gold Rush. Stephenson thought differently and in the town square proclaimed to over 200 men, "Why go to California? In that ridge lies more gold than man ever dreamt of. There’s millions in it." This excerpt was retold to Mark Twain by the miners who moved to California from Georgia and may have inspired his character Mulberry Sellers. Sellers was famous for his lines "There’s gold in them thar hills" and "there’s millions in it."
Stephenson wrote various articles on his observations of minerals, as well as mound excavations in Georgia. In the 1870s, several of his articles were published by the Smithsonian Institution, including Account of Ancient Mounds in Georgia and Mounds in Bartow County near Cartersville, Georgia. These described sites he visited and the artifacts found at each, such as mica mirrors, copper vessels, and quartz. He also published a major treatise in 1871 called Geology and Mineralogy of Georgia for which he is most famous. Other published works include a pamphlet Diamonds and Precious Stones in Georgia in 1878 and a historical sketch in 1866, Report on the Lewis Mine Property, White County, Georgia.
He served as the assayer of the Dahlonega Mint in Dahlonega, Georgia in the 1840s. When the gold rush in Georgia was believed to be over, many miners headed west to join the 1849 California Gold Rush. Stephenson thought differently and in the town square proclaimed to over 200 men, "Why go to California? In that ridge lies more gold than man ever dreamt of. There’s millions in it." This excerpt was retold to Mark Twain by the miners who moved to California from Georgia and may have inspired his character Mulberry Sellers. Sellers was famous for his lines "There’s gold in them thar hills" and "there’s millions in it."
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