Methyl iodide adsorbed on a Cu(110)-I surface has been found to be highly orientationally ordered. We have exploited this orientation to select different CH3I excited states for photodissociation by using polarized near-UV light at wavelengths of 308, 248, and 222 nm. Using p-polarized light at all three wavelengths, we find that dissociation proceeds largely via the (3)Q(0) state, consistent with the picture from gas-phase photolysis. In contrast, using s-polarized light we find contributions from the (3)Q(1) state at lambda=308 nm, the (1)Q(1) state at lambda=248 nm, and the (E,1) state at lambda=222 nm-the latter being a state that has not been implicated in gas-phase studies of CH3I A-band photolysis. We also note the contribution to surface photodissociation from low-energy photoelectrons causing dissociative electron attachment to adsorbed CH3I and have identified the promotion of direct photodissociation pathways during lambda=308 nm photolysis. (c) 2005 American Institute of Physics.