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Shellfish Resource Management in Massachusetts
Shellfish Resource Management in Massachusetts Helpful to educators and students. Leavitt, D.F. Focal Points, 3 pp., 2000 WHOI-G-00-003
Read MoreSand Transport by Unbroken Water Waves Under Sheet Flow Conditions
Sand Transport by Unbroken Water Waves Under Sheet Flow Conditions Trowbridge, J. and D. Young Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 94, No. C8, pp. 10971-10991, 1989 WHOI-R-89-015
Read MoreSome Initial Effects of Hurricane Hugo on Endangered and Endemic Species of West Indian Birds
Some Initial Effects of Hurricane Hugo on Endangered and Endemic Species of West Indian Birds Haney, J.C., J.M. Wunderle, and W.J. Arendt American Birds, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp. 234-236, 1991 WHOI-R-91-004 Hurricane Hugo, a category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 140-150 miles per hour and gusts over 180 miles per hour, was perhaps…
Read MoreWe Have Met the Enemy and It Is Us
We Have Met the Enemy and It Is Us Helpful to educators and students. Hendrickson, L. and G.S. Giese In: Hornig, D. (ed.) State of the Cape 1994: Progress Toward Preservation, Association for the Preservation of Cape Cod, Orleans, MA, pp. 157-174, 1994 WHOI-R-93-008
Read MoreShoreline Change and the Importance of Coastal Erosion
Shoreline Change and the Importance of Coastal Erosion Helpful to educators and students. WHOI Sea Grant Focal Points, 3 pp., 2000 WHOI-G-00-001
Read MoreLarval Exposure to 4-Nonylphenol and 17ß-Estradiol Affects Physiological and Behavioral Development of Seawater Adaptation in Atlantic Salmon Smolts
Larval Exposure to 4-Nonylphenol and 17ß-Estradiol Affects Physiological and Behavioral Development of Seawater Adaptation in Atlantic Salmon Smolts Lerner, D.T., B. Thrandur Björnsson, and S.D. McCormick Environ. Sci. Technol., Vol. 41, pp. 4479-4485, 2007 WHOI-R-07-006
Read MoreThe Little Fish with a Big Impact
In the Gulf of Maine, there’s a little eel-like fish not much bigger than a large pencil, that buries itself in the sand in the summer and swims up and down in the water column in the spring and fall. It’s called a sand lance and it’s incredibly important to the ecosystem of the Gulf of Maine. If you like whale watching, this little fish is the biggest reason you might or might not see a whale:
Read MoreChanges in the Metal Content of Surficial Sediments of Boston Harbor Since the Cessation of Sludge Discharge
Changes in the Metal Content of Surficial Sediments of Boston Harbor Since the Cessation of Sludge Discharge Zago, C., A.E. Giblin, and A. Bergamasco Elsevier, Marine Environmental Research, Vol. 51, pp. 389-415, 2001 WHOI-R-01-004
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