We present deep near-infrared JHK imaging of four 10'x10' fields. The
observations were carried out as part of the Multiwavelength Survey by
Yale-Chile (MUSYC) with ISPI on the CTIO 4m telescope. The typical point source
limiting depths are J~22.5, H~21.5, and K~21 (5sigma; Vega). The effective
seeing in the final images is ~1.0". We combine these data with MUSYC UBVRIz
imaging to create K-selected catalogs that are unique for their uniform size,
depth, filter coverage, and image quality. We investigate the rest-frame
optical colors and photometric redshifts of galaxies that are selected using
common color selection techniques, including distant red galaxies (DRGs),
star-forming and passive BzKs, and the rest-frame UV-selected BM, BX, and Lyman
break galaxies (LBGs). These techniques are effective at isolating large
samples of high redshift galaxies, but none provide complete or uniform samples
across the targeted redshift ranges. The DRG and BM/BX/LBG criteria identify
populations of red and blue galaxies, respectively, as they were designed to
do. The star-forming BzKs have a very wide redshift distribution, a wide range
of colors, and may include galaxies with very low specific star formation
rates. In comparison, the passive BzKs are fewer in number, have a different
distribution of K magnitudes, and have a somewhat different redshift
distribution. By combining these color selection criteria, it appears possible
to define a reasonably complete sample of galaxies to our flux limit over
specific redshift ranges. However, the redshift dependence of both the
completeness and sampled range of rest-frame colors poses an ultimate limit to
the usefulness of these techniques.Comment: 17 pages in emulateapj style, 13 figures. Submitted to the
Astronomical Journal. Data will be made available upon publicatio