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  • 1
    Keywords: Business and politics -- European Union countries. ; Business and politics -- United States. ; Environmental law -- United States. ; Industries -- Environmental aspects -- United States. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: This book traces of the history of American environmental and resource policy as well as offers a careful analysis of its current state. It places a strong emphasis on comparisons with more cooperative paths of environmental management in other nations.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (329 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780387758770
    DDC: 363.70560973
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- CONTENTS -- Prologue -- Acknowledgments -- Part I The Story -- 1 Out Current Conflict -- 1.1 Politics in America -- 1.2 Environmentalists Versus Industry: A Collision Between Two Post-World War II Movements -- 1.3 Battles over Offshore Oil and ANWR -- 1.4 Isolation of Information Systems Among Environmental Activists, Academic Analysts, and Producers -- 2 Tracing the Roots of the Conflict -- 2.1 Engineers and Pre-World War II America -- 2.2 1950s-1960s: Environmental and Other Stresses Begin to Erode the Boom -- 2.3 A New Academic Paradigm -- 2.4 The Modern Offshore Oil Industry -- 2.5 The Turbulent 1960s: Increasing Pollution, Environmental Problems, the Counterculture, and a Preoccupied Administration -- 2.6 Remedial Action Falters -- 2.7 The Collision: the Santa Barbara Oil Spill of 1969 -- 2.8 The 1970s and 1980s -- 2.9 Back to the Present -- 3 Why History Is Important for Environmental Decision Making Today and Tomorrow -- 3.1 Communications and the Importance of Mediators -- 3.2 Bad Governance Produces Bad Consequences for Society -- 3.3 Environmental and Public Health Management -- 3.4 People and Milestones in American Environmental History -- 4 The Environmental Revolution of the 1970s and Its Outcomes -- 4.1 Problems Prior to the 1970s -- 4.2 Results of the New System -- 4.3 Underexamined Problems -- 4.4 Infrastructure -- 5 Why Do Conflict and Polarization Matter? -- 5.1 Changing Energy Policies -- 5.2 Good Politics Versus "Inspirational" Politics -- 5.3 Exploring Methods to Reduce CO -- 5.4 Discussion -- 5.5 Summary -- 6 Foreign Experience -- 6.1 The European Union and Other Nations Take the Lead -- 6.2 Environmental Policies -- 6.3 Scandinavian Nations: Emergence of Post-environmental Societies -- 6.4 Discussion -- 6.5 Alternative Energy in Europe -- 7 Reform Efforts and the Future: Where Do We Go from Here?. , 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Selected Critiques and Problems with the old Regulatory System -- 7.3 Reform Efforts - History -- 7.4 Proposals for Reform -- 7.5 Why Major Reforms of the 1970s Environmental Regulatory System Failed - and Lawmakers Are Deterred from Attempting Reform -- 7.6 Facing the Music -- 7.7 Where Do We go from Here? -- Part II Cases, Documentation, and Policy Analysis -- 8 Case Studies and Examples -- 8.1 The Rise of German Science: Lessons Forgotten in US Science Policy after World War II -- 8.2 Whatever Happened to the Blue Revolution? -- 8.3 US Geological Survey -- 8.4 Environmental Laws and Cases -- 8.5 Corporate Scandals -- 8.6 Campaigns of Environmental Activist Organizations -- 8.7 Virginia Offshore Oil and Gas Issue -- 8.8 Guerrilla Warfare -- 8.9 Green jobs, United States and Sweden -- 8.10 Alternative Energy Sources and Emission Reduction Technologies -- Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) -- 8.11 Positive Developments in the Environmental Community -- 9 Policy Analysis -- 9.1 Post-World War II influences on US Academic Research and Policy Studies -- 9.2 Shifts in Attitudes of Scientific, Industrial, and Governmental Leadership During and Since World War II -- 9.3 Mediator-Leaders: A Critical Need for Future Progress -- 9.4 US and EU Lawmaking -- 9.5 Approach to the Present Research and Book -- 9.6 Conclusions -- References -- Notes -- Index.
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Lexington, Mass : Lexington Books [u.a.]
    Keywords: Ocean bottom ; Oceans. Benthic regions. Geological features ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Meeressediment ; Meeresboden ; Dynamisches System
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: X, 502 S. , Ill., Kt.
    ISBN: 0669028096
    DDC: 551.46'08
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: Includes bibliographies and index
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Ground water 42 (2004), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1745-6584
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
    Notes: Fresh ground water is widely distributed in subsurface sediments below the coastal bays of the Delmarva Peninsula (Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia). These conditions were revealed by nearly 300 km of streamer resistivity surveys, utilizing a towed multichannel cable system. Zones of high resistivity displayed by inversion modeling were confirmed by vibradrilling investigations to correspond to fresh ground water occurrences. Fresh water lenses extended from a few hundred meters up to 2 km from shore. Along the western margins of coastal bays in areas associated with fine-grained surficial sediments, high-resistivity layers were widespread and were especially pronounced near tidal creeks. Fresh ground water layers were less common along the eastern barrier-bar margins of the bays, where sediments were typically sandy. Mid-bay areas in Chincoteague Bay, Maryland, did not show evidence of fresh water. Indian River Bay, Delaware, showed complex subsurface salinity relationships, including an area with possible hypersaline brines. The new streamer resistivity system paired with vibradrilling in these investigations provides a powerful approach to recovering information required for extension of hydrologic modeling of shallow coastal aquifer systems into offshore areas.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Ground water 42 (2004), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1745-6584
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
    Notes: The small bays along the Atlantic coast of the Delmarva Peninsula (Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia) are a valuable natural resource, and an asset for commerce and recreation. These coastal bays also are vulnerable to eutrophication from the input of excess nutrients derived from agriculture and other human activities in the watersheds. Ground water discharge may be an appreciable source of fresh water and a transport pathway for nutrients entering the bays. This paper presents results from an investigation of the physical properties of the surficial aquifer and the processes associated with ground water flow beneath Indian River Bay, Delaware. A key aspect of the project was the deployment of a new technology, streaming horizontal resistivity, to map the subsurface distribution of fresh and saline ground water beneath the bay. The resistivity profiles showed complex patterns of ground water flow, modes of mixing, and submarine ground water discharge. Cores, gamma and electromagnetic-induction logs, and in situ ground water samples collected during a coring operation in Indian River Bay verified the interpretation of the resistivity profiles. The shore-parallel resistivity lines show subsurface zones of fresh ground water alternating with zones dominated by the flow of salt water from the estuary down into the aquifer. Advective flow produces plumes of fresh ground water 400 to 600 m wide and 20 m thick that may extend more than 1 km beneath the estuary. Zones of dispersive mixing between fresh and saline ground water develop on the upper, lower, and lateral boundaries of the plume. The plumes generally underlie small incised valleys that can be traced landward to streams draining the upland. The incised valleys are filled with 1 to 2 m of silt and peat that act as a semiconfining layer to restrict the downward flow of salt water from the estuary. Active circulation of both the fresh and saline ground water masses beneath the bay is inferred from the geophysical results and supported by geochemical data.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Ground water 42 (2004), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1745-6584
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
    Notes: To complement a large-scale geophysical investigation of occurrence and discharge of fresh water beneath Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia (Delmarva) coastal bays, we measured (1) salinity and nutrient concentrations in ground water samples from several offshore coring sites and (2) a suite of chemical and isotopic parameters, including age tracers, in ground water samples from a Delaware site. Samples were collected in a variety of Holocene and Plio-Pleistocene sediments in nearshore and offshore areas of the bays. Ground waters that were significantly fresher than overlying waters were found in plumes up to at least 15 m thick extending to more than 500 m offshore in some areas. Steep salinity and nutrient gradients occur within a few meters of the sediment surface in most locations studied. The zone of transition from deeper fresher waters to shallower brackish waters is generally thin near shore, but thickens and becomes more gradual offshore. Ground water ages at the Delaware site were mostly 〈 50 yr in both fresh waters and brackish waters up to 22 m below the bay bottom. Water chemistry and age data indicate that fresh water plumes beneath the estuary are active extensions of the surficial aquifer carrying nitrate from recharge areas on land, whereas brackish ground water surrounding the fresh water plumes is recharged beneath the estuary and contains ammonium and phosphate released by diagenesis of shallow estuarine sediments. Denitrification affects some of the fresh water nitrate before it mixes with brackish ground water or discharges to surface water.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Andrusov1 first described the microflora and fauna of Black Sea sediments, but found very few organisms in the fine deep water carbonate muds, an observation confirmed by later workers. John Murray2 ascribed the white, "amorphous" carbonate phases of Cherncmorets samples to inorganic precipitation, ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
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    Geologcial Society
    In:  In: Manganese mineralization: geochemistry and mineralogy of terrestrial and marine deposits. , ed. by Nicholson, K. Geological Society Special Publications, 119 . Geologcial Society, London, pp. 123-138.
    Publication Date: 2018-04-25
    Description: Iron, manganese, and iron-manganese deposits occur in nearly all geomorphologic and tectonic environments in the ocean basins and form by one or more of four processes: (1) hydrogenetic precipitation from cold ambient seawater, (2) precipitation from hydrothermal fluids, (3) precipitation from sediment pore waters that have been modified from bottom water compositions by diagenetic reactions in the sediment column and (4) replacement of rocks and sediment. Iron and manganese deposits occur in five forms: nodules, crusts, cements, mounds and sediment-hosted stratabound layers. Seafloor oxides show a wide range of compositions from nearly pure iron to nearly pure manganese end members. Fe/Mn ratios vary from about 24 000 (up to 58% elemental Fe) for hydrothermal seamount ironstones to about 0.001 (up to 52% Mn) for hydrothermal stratabound manganese oxides from active volcanic arcs. Hydrogenetic Fe-Mn crusts that occur on most seamounts in the ocean basins have a mean Fe/Mn ratio of 0.7 for open-ocean seamount crusts and 1.2 for continental margin seamount crusts. Fe-Mn nodules of potential economic interest from the Clarion-Clipperton Zone have a mean Fe/Mn ratio of 0.3, whereas the mean ratio for nodules from elsewhere in the Pacific is about 0.7. Crusts are enriched in Co, Ni and Pt and nodules in Cu and Ni, and both have significant concentrations of Pb, Zn, Ba, Mo, V and other elements. In contrast, hydrothermal deposits commonly contain only minor trace metal contents, although there are many exceptions, for example, with Ni contents up to 0.66%, Cr to 1.2%, and Zn to 1.4%. Chondrite-normalized REE patterns generally show a positive Ce anomaly and abundant ΣREEs for hydrogenetic and mixed hydrogenetic-diagenetic deposits, whereas the Ce anomaly is negative for hydrothermal deposits and ΣREE contents are low. However, the Ce anomaly in crusts may vary from strongly positive in East Pacific crusts to slightly negative in West Pacific crusts, which may reflect the redox conditions of seawater. The concentration of elements in hydrogenetic Fe-Mn crusts depends on a wide variety of water column and crust surface characteristics, whereas concentration of elements in hydrothermal oxide deposits depends of the intensity of leaching, rock types leached, and precipitation of sulphides at depth in the hydrothermal system.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Originally issued as Reference No. 67-80, series later renamed WHOI-
    Description: In late June and July, 1967, the Deep Submergence Research Vehicle (DSRV) ALVIN, aboard its mother snip, LULU, proceeded from the spring base of operations, Nassau, to its home port of Woods Hole. During this trip, from July 2 to July 14, a series of five dives were made by ALVIN on the Blake Plateau off Georgia and South Carolina, and on the continental slope north of Cape Hatteras.
    Description: U.S. Geological Survey Contracts 14-08-0001-10875 Nonr-3484(00).
    Keywords: Alvin (Submarine) ; Lulu (Ship) Cruise
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Technical Report
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: A shortened version of this report, edited for a wide audience, but without references was published in Geotimes, v. 31, December, 1986, (p. 8-10) under the title "E.E.Z. may have waste-disposal options".
    Description: Some areas of the E.E.Z. (Exclusive Economic Zone) offer technical, political and economic options that may complement existing approaches to hazardous waste storage and disposal.
    Keywords: Radioactive waste disposal in the ocean ; Economic zones (Law of the sea)
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Technical Report
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-08-28
    Keywords: Aluminium oxide; Blake Plateau, Atlantic Ocean; Calcium oxide; Carbon dioxide; Copper(II) oxide; Deposit type; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Dredge; DRG; Event label; GOS74; GOS74-2339; GOS74-2342; GOS74-2374; GOS74-2381; GOS74-2384; GOS74-2387; GOS74-2389; GOS74-2390; GOS74-2392; GOS74-2393; GOS74-2478; GOS74-2481; Gosnold; Identification; Iron oxide, Fe2O3; Loss on drying; Loss on ignition; Magnesium oxide; Manganese dioxide; Nickel oxide; NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS; Phosphorus pentoxide; Potassium oxide; Silicon dioxide; Sodium oxide; Strontium oxide; Titanium dioxide; Wet chemistry
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 270 data points
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