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The Recognition, Investigation, Interpretation, and Treatment of Landslides in the Pacific NorthwestLudowise, Harry 01 January 1974 (has links)
Certain features unique to the Pacific Northwest influence landsliding in this region. Weakly consolidated sediments, dense vegetation and seasonally concentrated rainfall all contribute to the distinctive conditions that are encountered here.
This study gathers together information applying to the recognition and correction of Pacific Northwest landslides. Treatment practices common to this region are discussed.
A large slide located about 30 miles east of Portland, Oregon along the Clackamas River is used as an example. Exploration, instrumentation, analysis and corrective measures are illustrated.
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The Preservation and Deconstruction of Hawaii Plantation Style Architecture: A iea, Waipahu, and EwaWay, Jessica Margaret 01 January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Contributions to the taxonomy and zoogeography of the Australian and Southern Pacific regions' Heteroptera (Insecta-Hemiptera)Gross, Gordon F. (Gordon Flinders) January 1979 (has links)
2v. : / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (D.Sc.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Entomology, 1979
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The structure and tectonics of the Blanco Fracture ZoneIbach, Darrell Henry 06 August 1980 (has links)
Graduation date: 1981 / Best scan available. Figures in original are black and white photocopies.
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Sedimentary organic matter : distribution and alteration processes in the coastal upwelling region off PeruReimers, Clare Elizabeth 06 November 1981 (has links)
Graduation date: 1982
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Computer analysis of the surface current field off Oregon based on drift bottle dataLung, Hu Ernest 30 April 1973 (has links)
The fall-winter surface current field off Oregon was determined
by analysis of ten years of drift bottle data. Computer programs were
developed for generating bottle tracks on a numerical grid, for interpolating
bottle velocity components to fill void grid points and for
smoothing irregularities in the velocity fields. Charts are presented
showing the spatial distribution of surface currents determined in the
study area of 5° latitude by 2-1/2° longitude.
The mean currents for the fall-winter season have a predominantly
northerly flow with speeds increasing from the south to the
north (from 0.01 to 0.35 knots). This probably is a consequence of
the increase in speed of southerly winds from south to north in the
study area during the fall-winter season. The northly flow in October
during the years 1961-70, when compared with the dominant southerly
flow during this month from measurements prior to 1935, may indicate
a major change of Davidson-California Current System within the
past forty years. Apparent onshore flow may be introduced by bottle
diffusion; this flow is prominant at all latitudes along which bottle
releases are concentrated. An offshore flow component north of
46°30'N may be related to the Columbia River discharge and the
westward extension of land. / Graduation date: 1973
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Temperature finestructure and microstructure observations in the coastal upwelling region off Oregon during the summer of 1974Marmorino, G. O. 12 November 1976 (has links)
Graduation date: 1977
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Determination of ⁶⁵Zn specific activity in various tissues of the California sea mussel, Mytilus californianusLarsen, Ingvar Lauren 15 December 1970 (has links)
The specific activity of ⁶⁵Zn (nanocuries ⁶⁵Zn/g total Zn)
was determined in various organs of the common coastal mussel,
Mytilus californianus Conrad, collected from six locations along
the Pacific Coast. These organs included the gills, mantle, foot,
reproductive organs, adductor muscle, and viscera. After ashing
and dissolving with nitric acid (8 M), each tissue was analyzed for
⁶⁵Zn by gamma-ray spectrometry. The determination of total zinc
concentrations of the various organs was accomplished by atomic
absorption spectrophotometry as well as by neutron activation
analysis.
Variable amounts of both stable zinc and radioactive ⁶⁵Zn
were observed within the specific tissues from a given location.
The ⁶⁵Zn specific activities of the tissues of organisms from a
particular station however, tended to be uniform, at least within
the uncertainty of the measurements. Both radiozinc and ⁶⁵Zn
specific activity decreased with distance from the Columbia River
mouth, whereas the stable zinc tended to remain uniform for a
specific tissue. Tissues high in radiozinc were also high
in stable zinc and conversely.
An estimate of the input specific activity from the mussel'
environment (food and/or water) was calculated from a simple
model resulting in a value similar to zooplankton values sampled
from within the Columbia River plume.
Comparison of the concentrations of zinc determined by
neutron activation with those determined by atomic absorption
spectrophotometry indicated a linear relationship between the
two methods. Results of atomic absorption measurements were
approximately 27% larger than the results of neutron activation
analysis, indicating the presence of a systematic error. The
higher values attained by atomic absorption are attributed to
evaporation during storage of the ash solution which would lead
to an increase in zinc concentration. In considering the two
methods of analysis, economy of both time and expenses favors
the atomic absorption method over that of neutron activation. / Graduation date: 1971
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Continuous seismic profiling investigation of the southern Oregon continental shelf between Cape Blanco and Coos BayMackay, Angus James 01 November 1968 (has links)
A structure map was constructed of the continental shelf between
Cape Blanco and Coos Bay, Oregon, exclusively from an interpretation
of approximately 700 km of continuous seismic profiles.
At least ten discernible seismic units were mapped on the bases of
acoustic appearance, lateral continuity, angular unconformities, and
faults. The offshore units tentatively were correlated with onshore
geology and are believed to range in age from the latest Jurassic to
late Pleistocene. The sparker profiles reveal that the continental
shelf off southern Oregon has experienced significant late Tertiary
and Quaternary accretion due to deposition and tectonic uplift.
The oldest rock exposures, believed to be the latest Jurassic
in age, crop out on the inner continental shelf on the topographic
highs off Cape Blanco and Coquille Point. Erosional remnants of
probable Late Cretaceous turbidites and the middle Eocene sandstone
beds also are exposed on the bathymetric high on the inner
shelf southwest of Cape Arago. The initial emplacement of these
three uplifted structural blocks is probably a result of late Eocene
wrench faulting of the Port Orford shear zone and of the postulated
shear zone at Coquille Point.
No other early Tertiary sediments apparently are exposed on
this portion of the Oregon continental shelf, but they probably extend
seaward at depth on the continental margin. Middle Tertiary
strata are believed to be exposed on the outer shelf topographic high
southwest of Cape Arago.
Sediments of Miocene to Pliocene age were deposited throughout
much of the continental shelf that was surveyed. The greatest
amount of deposition occurred in a north-south trending basin between
Cape Blanco and Coquille Bank. Late to post-Pliocene tectonism
uplifted and exposed the older underlying rocks on the inner
shelf, which are probably of uppermost Jurassic to middle Tertiary
age. These same stresses also deformed the Mio-Pliocene sediments
into gently undulating structures on the inner shelf. The
greatest deformation occurred on the outer shelf and formed
Coquille Bank, a north-south trending, doubly plunging, asymmetrical
anticline. The terraces or benches on the upper continental
slope to the north and south of the Bank are structural features resulting from the doubly plunging anticline.
Eustatic sea level lowerings during the Pleistocene truncated
the shelf structures as deep as 130 m below present sea level. The
detritus was deposited as a wedge of sediments, which forms an unconformable
contact with the underlying strata on the outer shelf and
upper slope between Coos Bay and Coquille Bank. In areas of deposition
there is no distinct break between the shelf and the upper slope;
the former merely merges into the latter in a continuous convex
curve. In areas of nondeposition, the edge of the shelf is an erosional
and structural feature.
A possible buried channel was detected northwest of the mouth
of the Coquille River. This sediment filled channel is believed to be
an erosional remnant of a former course of the Coquille River during
a lower stand of sea level. / Graduation date: 1969
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Properties of low-level marine clouds as deduced from advanced very high resolution radiometer satellite observationsChang, Fu-Lung 05 August 1997 (has links)
A radiation model was developed for retrieving cloud visible optical depth,
droplet effective radius, and cloud top emission temperature using AVHRR satellite
observations at 0.63, 3.7, and 11 ��m. The model was used to determine the sensitivity
of the retrieved properties to various approximations often employed in such retrievals.
Droplet effective radius appears to be the most sensitive to the commonly used
approximations. Cloud properties retrieved using a 16-stream scheme were within ��5%
of those retrieved using a 148-stream scheme. Cloud properties retrieved using double
Henyey-Greenstein phase functions were within ��10% of those retrieved using Mie
scattering. The retrieved cloud properties were used to investigate biases that arise when
partly cloudy pixels were assumed to be overcast and biases that arise due to oblique
satellite view angles. On average, cloud visible optical depths retrieved for partly cloudy
pixels were 40-60% of those retrieved for overcast pixels. Likewise, cloud liquid water
paths were 30-50%, droplet effective radii were 1-3 ��m smaller, and cloud top emission
temperatures were 2-4K larger. Cloud visible optical depths retrieved at 60�� satellite
zenith angles were 60-70% of those retrieved at nadir. The retrieved droplet effective
radii and cloud top emission temperatures varied little with changing satellite zenith
angle. For March 1989, cloud optical depths and cloud emission temperatures retrieved
for pixels overcast by single-layer, low-level clouds were negatively correlated. Cloud
optical depth, liquid water path, and droplet effective radius were positively correlated
with the sea surface-cloud top temperature difference.
The retrieved cloud properties were also compared for the spatial coherence,
CLAVR (Clouds from AVHRR), and a threshold method based on International Satellite
Cloud Climatology Project procedures. For regions containing single-layered cloud
systems, fractional cloud cover and cloud brightness temperatures derived by the
ISCCP-like threshold method were systematically larger than those derived by the
spatial coherence method, whereas cloud reflectivities were systematically smaller.
Cloud reflectivities and brightness temperatures derived by CLAVR and the spatial
coherence method were in better agreement. / Graduation date: 1998
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