Distant photograph of two surveyors standing in the bottom of a wide ditch created by a washout of the Southern Pacific Railroad near San Dimas. The tunnel view of the ditch is widest along the bottom edge of the frame and recedes into the distance at center. Tall earthen walls line either side of the ditch. About halfway down the ditch, a surveyor stands next to his equipment at center. Another surveyor stands off to the left and leans against the dirt wall of the ditch. Lumber rests propped up against the ditch in the foreground at left. A fence lines the top of the ditch at right and utility poles line the top of the ditch at left.
Photograph of a wide ditch created by the washout of the Southern Pacific Railroad near San Dimas. The tunnel view looks down into the ditch from above. It is widest along the bottom edge of the frame and recedes into the distance at center. A portion of the track extends into the frame at right. The track remnants hang over the ditch. Tall earthen walls sink down along either side of the ditch. A fence lines the top of the ditch at right and utility poles line the top of the ditch at left. Trees and hills stand in the far distance.
Distant photograph of two surveyors standing in the bottom of a wide ditch created by a washout of the Southern Pacific Railroad near San Dimas. The tunnel view of the ditch is widest along the bottom edge of the frame and winds as it recedes into the distance at center. Tall earthen walls line either side of the ditch. The ditch extends back slightly towards the left and curves to the right. It appears to curve left again further in the distance. In the near distance, a piece of surveying equipment stands at center atop a tripod. Beyond it, a surveyor stands at center and another surveyor stands off to the left and next to the dirt wall of the ditch. Above the man at left, remnants of the train tracks are visible hanging just over the edge of the ditch. In the far distance, a windmill stands at center, rising above the far wall of the ditch.