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Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Legal Symposium On Wetlands: An Executive Summary, Roger D. Anderson, David Garten, Ted Smolen
Legal Symposium On Wetlands: An Executive Summary, Roger D. Anderson, David Garten, Ted Smolen
Reports
In 1969 the Virginia Institute of Marine Science published a report stating that although marshlands represented only one-half of one percent of the total area of the state, 95 percent of Virginia 's annual harvest of sport and commercial fisheries were dependent to some degree upon these valuable wetlands . The report went on to urge some form of public control over these vital areas in order to relieve some of the pressures created by dredging, filling, diking and bulkheading.
Recognizing the need to address this issue, the 1971 General Assembly passed House Joint Resolution Number 60, creating a Wetlands …
Suspended Sediments Near Pier 12 Norfolk Navy Base On 26 June And 15 September, 1973, Evon P. Ruzecki, R. Ayres
Suspended Sediments Near Pier 12 Norfolk Navy Base On 26 June And 15 September, 1973, Evon P. Ruzecki, R. Ayres
Reports
Results of two suspended sediment studies near Norfolk Navy Base Pier 12 are given. The studies were conducted during one tidal cycle on both 26 June and 15 September 1973. The following parameters were measured at five stations in the vicinity of the pier: suspended sediment water temperature, salinity and density current speed and direction iv
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume Ii : Climatology, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume Ii : Climatology, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
Reports
The geographic area covered in this report extends from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, on the north, to Cape Canaveral, Florida, to the·south. Included within this area are portions of the coastal areas of South Carolina and Georgia. All or portions of thirty coastal counties are included within the study area.
Estuaries in this area tend to be partially mixed due to relatively low runoff per mile of coast. The proximity of the Gulf Stream to the continental shelf and the low runoff combine to cause the salinity of the coastal water to be somewhat higher than that of the coastal …
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume Iv: Geological Oceanography, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume Iv: Geological Oceanography, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
Reports
The geographic area covered in this report extends from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, on the north, to Cape Canaveral, Florida, to the south. Included within this area are portions of the coastal areas of South Carolina and Georgia. All or portions of thirty coastal counties are included within the study area.
- Chapter 1 - Introduction
- Chapter 2 - Coastal Plain-Subzone I-Cape Hatteras to Winyah Bay
- Chapter 3 - Coastal Plain-Subzone II-Winyah Bay to St. Johns River
- Chapter 4 - Coastal Plain-Subzone III-St. Johns River to Cape Canaveral
- Chapter 5 - Continental Shelf-Subzone I-Cape Hatteras to Winyah Bay
- Chapter 6 - …
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume 1 : Physical Oceanography, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary For The South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina And Cape Canaveral, Florida Volume 1 : Physical Oceanography, Virginia Institute Of Marine Science
Reports
The paucity of oceanographic data on the continental shelf and in the estuaries south of Cape Hatteras, North carolina hinders attempts to document the oceanographic conditions. In general data are more available and conditions better understood in the estuaries than on the continental shelf.
The estuaries of the Southern Atlantic Bight have not been studied as extensively as the large embayments to the north. Generally the estuaries tend to be partially mixed since runoff and thus river flow is not great in these river systems. Both the distance the tidal effect is felt and the distance up the estuary that …
Studies Of Certain Impacts Of Tropical Storm Agnes On The Chesapeake Bay And Its Tributaries - A Final Report On Activities, William J. Hargis Jr.
Studies Of Certain Impacts Of Tropical Storm Agnes On The Chesapeake Bay And Its Tributaries - A Final Report On Activities, William J. Hargis Jr.
Reports
In the summer of 1972 Hurricane Agnes, spawned over the Yucatan Peninsula, developed in full force in the Gulf of Mexico, bulled its way ashore in Western Florida (and Southeastern Alabama) and spent its fury in the interior. It arrived in the Middle-Atlantic States as an Extratropical Storm. At every stage it was disruptive and destructive.
In the Chesapeake Bay Drainage Basin, Agnes was particularly spectacular even though her wind velocities were markedly reduced. In particular, she poured vast amounts of rain on an already saturated land. In rapid succession the James, the Potomac and the Susquehanna were driven into …
Electron Detachment In Low-Energy Collisions Of H- And D- With He, S. K. Lam, John B. Delos, L. Champion, L. D. Doverspike
Electron Detachment In Low-Energy Collisions Of H- And D- With He, S. K. Lam, John B. Delos, L. Champion, L. D. Doverspike
Arts & Sciences Articles
Measurements and calculations have been made of elastic scattering and electron detachment in collisions of H− and D− with He at energies of 5-120 eV. The measurements show no other inelastic processes occurring in this energy range. The mechanism responsible for electron detachment is assumed to be the crossing of the H− bound state with the continuum of free states; the bound state is then assigned a complex energy. The measured elastic scattering differential cross section shows no structure except at Eθ∼200 eV deg, where there is a region of downward curvature in the graph of logσ vs θ. This …
Oyster Spatfall On Shellstrings In Virginia Rivers: 1973 Annual Summary, Dexter S. Haven, Paul C. Kendall
Oyster Spatfall On Shellstrings In Virginia Rivers: 1973 Annual Summary, Dexter S. Haven, Paul C. Kendall
Reports
Although oyster setting levels in most Virginia river systems are still far below trose whicb commonly occurred prior to 1960, the 1973 season marked an improvement over the previous year when Tropical Storm Agnes raged througb the Chesapeake Bay region, creating adverse environmental conditions which were largely responsible_ for the_ lowest s},tting levels on record, Data for 1972,
Studies Of The Potential Curve Crossing Problem. Iii. Collisional Spectroscopy Of Close Crossings, John B. Delos
Studies Of The Potential Curve Crossing Problem. Iii. Collisional Spectroscopy Of Close Crossings, John B. Delos
Arts & Sciences Articles
Using a previously developed semiclassical theory of electronic excitations, the cross sections that result from potential-curve crossings are calculated for a model system. The phenomena appearing in the differential cross sections are displayed and discussed.
An Experimental Study Of Habitat Selection By Juveniles Of Six Species Of Sciaenids Found In The Lower York River, Virginia, Arthur Carter Cooke
An Experimental Study Of Habitat Selection By Juveniles Of Six Species Of Sciaenids Found In The Lower York River, Virginia, Arthur Carter Cooke
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
The Effects Of Salinity Shocks And Low Oxygen Levels On Atpase Activity In Two Estuarine Bivalves, Marvin Ervis Hedgepeth
The Effects Of Salinity Shocks And Low Oxygen Levels On Atpase Activity In Two Estuarine Bivalves, Marvin Ervis Hedgepeth
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Experimental Studies Of Muonium Production And The Muonium-Antimuonium Transition In Free Space, Cheng-Shong Hsieh
Experimental Studies Of Muonium Production And The Muonium-Antimuonium Transition In Free Space, Cheng-Shong Hsieh
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Improved Calculations Of The Complex Dielectric Constant Of Semiconductors, Roger Allen Breckenridge
Improved Calculations Of The Complex Dielectric Constant Of Semiconductors, Roger Allen Breckenridge
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Measurements Of The Magnetic Dipole Moments Of The Antiproton And The Sigma- Hyperon, B. Lee Roberts
Measurements Of The Magnetic Dipole Moments Of The Antiproton And The Sigma- Hyperon, B. Lee Roberts
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Negative Muon Depolarization In Liquid Helium And Several Hydrocarbons, David C. Buckle
Negative Muon Depolarization In Liquid Helium And Several Hydrocarbons, David C. Buckle
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Precession Of Positive Muons In Nickel, Mary Louis Grayson Foy
Precession Of Positive Muons In Nickel, Mary Louis Grayson Foy
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Measurement Of Positive And Negative Pion Total Cross-Sections On Helium-3, Beryllium-9, And Carbon-12 Over The 3/2, 3/2 Resonance Region, Charles Bailey Spence Jr.
Measurement Of Positive And Negative Pion Total Cross-Sections On Helium-3, Beryllium-9, And Carbon-12 Over The 3/2, 3/2 Resonance Region, Charles Bailey Spence Jr.
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Temporal And Spatial Heterogeneity In Diatom Populations Of The Lower York River, Virginia, John Joseph Manzi
Temporal And Spatial Heterogeneity In Diatom Populations Of The Lower York River, Virginia, John Joseph Manzi
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Sediment Transport Processes In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John Daniel Boon Iii
Sediment Transport Processes In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John Daniel Boon Iii
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Heavy Metal Concentrations In The Clam Rangia Cuneata From The Rappahannock And James Rivers, Robert Emile Croonenberghs
Heavy Metal Concentrations In The Clam Rangia Cuneata From The Rappahannock And James Rivers, Robert Emile Croonenberghs
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
This project investigated the feasibility of using the brackish water clam Rangia cuneata as a heavy metal pollution indicator, and further investigated the state of heavy metal pollution in the James River. Rangia cuneata were sampled in the fall of 1972 from the Rappahannock and James Rivers , and meats were analyzed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry for wet weight concentrations of copper, zinc, cadmium and lead. Levels of copper and zinc in Rangia cuneata were shown to be unaffected by clam size, spawning differences, salinity or distance upriver, and substrate grain size. Heavy metal concentrations in the oxidized channel sediments, …
Carbon Transport In Two York River, Virginia Tidal Marshes, Kenneth Alan Moore
Carbon Transport In Two York River, Virginia Tidal Marshes, Kenneth Alan Moore
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
Annual net transports of particulate organic carbon (POC), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and ATP-carbon were determined for two York River, Virginia, tidal marshes by monthly sampling for one year. Annual net losses of POC, DOC, and ATP-carbon from the marsh to the York River were observed for both areas, indicating that the long-term effect of these marshlands is to contribute both living and detrital organic material to the estuary. The mesohaline marsh area, Carter Creek, was observed to have the greater amount of organic carbon loss in the particulate fraction, while the oligohaline marsh area, Ware Creek, was observed to …
Optimized Measurements Of Discharge And Suspended Sediment Transport In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon
Optimized Measurements Of Discharge And Suspended Sediment Transport In A Salt Marsh Drainage System, John D. Boon
VIMS Articles
Detailed measurements of current speed and suspended sedlment concentration distributions in a channel cross-section of a tidal marsh creek were analyzed. Subsequent sampiing Intervals In time and space were selected to provide acceptable estimates of flood and ebb transport of water and suspended sediment post the cross sectlon. Data from eight 13-hour measurement runs taken at various times of the year seem to favor a net ebb resldual of suspended sedlment transport for the year In question.
A number of environmental factors appear to Influence suspended sediment trons· port in marsh channels.Residual transport of sediment In these systems is, however, …
Segmentation Of Chesapeake Bay: A Representative Exercise, Robert E. Ulanowicz, Bruce J. Neilson
Segmentation Of Chesapeake Bay: A Representative Exercise, Robert E. Ulanowicz, Bruce J. Neilson
Reports
The goal of the CRC/RANN Waste Water Program is to provide the tools to management agencies which will enable them to make sound quantitative decisions on the siting of future sewage outfalls and the upgrading or elimination of existing sewage treatment plants. Obviously, the available funds do not permit extensive field studies at every possible outfall site. Therefore, some system is needed which will allow data to be transferred from one area to other areas within the Bay which have similar characteristics. A system of "segmentation"., as suggested by Dr. D. W. Pritchard, was chosen by the Scientific Management Advisory …
Coastal Data Acquisition, Compilation And Analysis, Virginia Beach Coastal Compartment, Southeastern Virginia : Quarterly Technical Status Report June 10, 1974 - Sept. 10, 1974, Victor Goldsmith
Reports
No abstract provided.
Acute Effect Of Free Chlorine On Selected Estuarine Invertebrates And Vertebrates : Final Report, Morris H. Roberts, Robert J. Diaz
Acute Effect Of Free Chlorine On Selected Estuarine Invertebrates And Vertebrates : Final Report, Morris H. Roberts, Robert J. Diaz
Reports
The objective of this project was to determine acute toxic effects of chlorine on selected estuarine organisms found adjacent to the projected outfall of a sewage treatment plant in the lower York River. The test species specified under contract were ovster (Crassostrea virginica) and clam (Mercenaria mercenaria) larvae, Acartia tonsa (a dominant copepod), and the fishes, menhaden (Brcvoortia tyranus), pipefish (Svngnathus fuscus), blennies (Hypsoplennius hentzi) and sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus). The parameter of interest in the tests was mortality when the animals were exposed to a constant level of chlorine for a 48 or 96 hr period.
Report On Water Quality Data Evaluation And Program Design Services For The James And York Rivers In Conjunction With The "208" Planning Program For The Tidewater Region Of Virginia, Michael E. Bender, C. S. Fang, Bruce J. Neilson
Report On Water Quality Data Evaluation And Program Design Services For The James And York Rivers In Conjunction With The "208" Planning Program For The Tidewater Region Of Virginia, Michael E. Bender, C. S. Fang, Bruce J. Neilson
Reports
The study area considered in this report includes the following: The James River from Fort Monroe to the mouth of the Chickahominy River (statute mile 45) including the small tributaries on the north shore but not the Chickahominy; the York River from its mouth to the confluence of the Mattaponi and Pamunkey at West Point (statute mile 33.5) including the small tributaries along the south shore; and the small drainage area adjacent to Chesapeake Bay lying between the York and James basins. The two rivers included in this basin are Poquoson River and Back River.
Ecological Survey, Upper James River, Surry Nuclear Power Station Site, August 1974, M. Bender, R. Jordan, M. Ho, M. Cavell
Ecological Survey, Upper James River, Surry Nuclear Power Station Site, August 1974, M. Bender, R. Jordan, M. Ho, M. Cavell
Reports
In May of 1969 field surveys to characterize selected biological communities in the Hog Island area of the James River were begun. The objective of these surveys has been to determine if significant changes occurred in the species composition or population levels of certain communities which could be related to the operation of the nuclear power generation station. Although during the period of study, methods and stations have been changed to adjust the study to changing regulations, its basic character has remained. Communities studied have included benthos, zoo- and phytoplankton and fouling organisms.
Final Report On Environmental Effects Of The Second Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Construction To Virginia Department Of Highways : Effects On Benthic Communities, Donald F. Boesch, David H. Rackley
Final Report On Environmental Effects Of The Second Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Construction To Virginia Department Of Highways : Effects On Benthic Communities, Donald F. Boesch, David H. Rackley
Reports
A sampling program was undertaken from July 1973 to June 1974, to assess the effects of construction of the second Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel on the benthic communities in the vicinity. Macrobenthic animals (defined as those retained by a 1.0 mm mesh sieve) were quantitatively sampled along three transects perpendicular to the new tunnel and in and around the fill "borrow areas" nearby on Willoughby Bank and Sewell's Point Spit. The effects of construction practices on the benthic communities·was assessed through interpretation of faunal composition, sediment characteristics, and bottom profiles.
Lower York River Dissolved Oxygen Study, Robert A. Jordan
Lower York River Dissolved Oxygen Study, Robert A. Jordan
Reports
Past studies of the lowerr York River have shown that dissolved oxygen (D .O.) concentrations decline in the summer months, occasionally falling one mg/ 1 near the bottom in deep water (Brehmer,1970; Jordan,1973) . Due to this apparently natural phenomenon the Virginia water quality standards for D.O. in estuaries (4.0 mg/1 allowable minimum, 5 .0 mg/1 minimum daily average, U.S.. E.P.A,1971), are not met during this period . Therefore additional waste-water discharges into the lower York River will not initiate violation of the standards, but may exacerbate the existing situation by extending the area and the time period affected by …
A Program To Monitor The Environmental Effects Of Shipyard Expansion : A Final Report, Robert J. Diaz, M. E. Bender
A Program To Monitor The Environmental Effects Of Shipyard Expansion : A Final Report, Robert J. Diaz, M. E. Bender
Reports
Dredging and land reclamation are two of the potentially most damaging activities that man undertakes in estuarine areas. Hampton Roads, the world's largest natural harbor, is a multiple use port, being a major center for fishing and shellfishing, transportation, recreation and industrial sitings. Dredging which is a necessary perpetuation for some of these activities, could be directly or indirectly detrimental to others. It is in such a multiple use situation that environmental alterations, real or potential, must be carefully planned and closely monitored. Projects of the type underway can cause changes in circulation, water depth, turbidity, and patterns qf siltation, …