Spelling suggestions: "subject:"pacific coast"" "subject:"pacific boast""
21 |
West coast style : modern homes and lifestyles in Canada, 1945-1995Shaw, Nancy (Nancy Alison), 1962- January 1995 (has links)
In Canada, West Coast Style has come to be associated with domestic architecture and a relaxed, modern lifestyle characteristic of the region's exceptional geography and climate. My thesis is a study of how this cultural formation has been figured and refigured since the Second World War through a historical and discursive analysis of West Coast Style. This cultural study focuses on how the term West Coast Style circulates and shifts meaning in relationship to a variety of domestic architectures such as the suburban single-family dwelling and more urban types like the coop, condominium and high rise. In addition, I consider how West Coast Style has been configured in debates about architectural modernism and postmodernism, Canadian cultural nationalism, and in newly emerging civic, global, and transnational geo-political, economic and cultural networks.
|
22 |
Relationships between near-surface plankton distributions, hydrography, and satellite measured sea surface thermal patternsThomas, Andrew Charles January 1987 (has links)
In-situ measurements of surface chlorophyll and zooplankton concentration are compared with in-situ hydrographic measurements and infrared satellite images of the west coast of British Columbia. Their relationships are quantified for a mid-summer and an early winter study period. Winter in-situ hydrographic data showed the shelf to be dominated by Vancouver Island Coastal Current water near-shore, Davidson Current water over the middle shelf, a frontal zone separating these regimes, and North Pacific water over the shelf break. The summer shelf was dominated by topographically induced upwelling in the southern portion of the shelf and stratified regions over the outer shelf and shallow banks further north. Strong northwest winds late in the summer study period induced upwelling along the entire shelf. The surface thermal signature of each of these regimes was identifiable in the satellite imagery.
Maximum winter concentrations of chlorophyll and zooplankton were associated with Vancouver Island Coastal Current water and southern portions of the frontal zone. Davidson Current water consistently had the lowest chlorophyll concentrations in the winter study area. Zooplankton concentrations decreased with increasing temperature and distance from shore. The correlation of loge transformed zooplankton concentrations with surface temperature allowed the satellite imagery to explain 49% of the sampled variance. The association of specific chlorophyll concentrations with each hydrographic regime enabled the satellite imagery, in conjunction with an image derived salinity model, to explain 55% of the sampled variance. Image derived plankton models allowed a spatial representation of predicted plankton concentration and the model error.
Summer zooplankton concentrations were not consistently related to satellite measured surface temperature but showed a qualitative association with higher chlorophyll concentrations around the outer edge of the upwelling area. Minimum chlorophyll concentrations were found in warm, stratified surface water and intermediate concentrations in the coldest, most recently upwelled water. Maximum concentrations occurred at intermediate temperatures. A least squares fit non-linear equation showed the satellite measured surface temperature patterns explained 72% of the sampled loge transformed chlorophyll variance. Distributions of both zooplankton and chlorophyll concentration retained their association with patterns of sea surface temperature during a wind driven upwelling event.
Multivariate cluster analysis of zooplankton taxonomic groups during both winter and summer showed spatial patterns of community composition matched satellite measured patterns of sea surface temperature over the middle and inner shelf. Over the outer shelf, spatial patterns of community structure appeared more closely associated with depth than surface thermal patterns. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
|
23 |
Occurrence and Concentrations of Caffeine in Seawater from the Oregon Coast and Potential Effects on the Dominant Mussel, Mytilus californianusRodriguez del Rey, Zoe 01 January 2010 (has links)
Caffeine, a biologically active drug with many known molecular targets, is recognized as a contaminant of aquatic systems including marine systems. Although the concentrations of caffeine reported from aquatic systems are low (ng/L to μ/L), harmful ecological effects not detected by traditional toxicity tests could occur as a result of caffeine contamination. The goals of this thesis project were to: 1) quantify concentrations of caffeine occurring in the coastal ocean off of the Oregon Coast and to determine if higher levels were correlated with proximity to caffeine pollution sources; and 2) investigate the sub-lethal cellular toxicity of environmentally relevant concentrations of caffeine on Mytilus californianus, an intertidal mussel that is one of the dominant species of the Oregon Coast. Caffeine was analyzed at 14 locations in the coastal ocean off of the Oregon Coast. Sampling locations were stratified between populated areas identified as having sources of caffeine pollution and sites located in sparsely populated areas not in proximity to major caffeine pollution sources. Caffeine concentrations were also measured in the major water body discharging near sampling locations. Caffeine was detected in water from the coastal ocean off of the Oregon Coast at concentrations ranging from below the reporting limit to 44.7 ng/L. The occurrence and concentrations of caffeine in the coastal ocean did not correspond well with pollution threats from population density and point and non-point sources, but did correspond with a storm event occurrence. Caffeine concentrations in rivers and estuaries draining to the coast ranged from below the reporting limit to 152.2 ng/L. Hsp70, a molecular biomarker of cellular stress, was used to investigate the sub-lethal toxicity of environmentally relevant concentrations of caffeine to the mussel M. californianus. Hsp70 concentrations in the gill and mantle tissue of mussels exposed to 0.05, 0.2, and 0.5 μ/L of caffeine for 10, 20, and 30 days were compared to basal levels in control mussels. Hsp70 in the gill tissue of M. californianus had an initial attenuation of the stress protein followed by a significant albeit moderate up-regulation relative to controls in all but the 0.5 μ/L treatment. Hsp70 in the mantle tissue of mussels exposed to caffeine did not differ from control mussels. This Study confirms the presence of caffeine in Oregon's coastal ocean and provides laboratory evidence that environmentally relevant concentrations of caffeine can exert an effect on M. californianus gill tissue at the molecular-level.
|
24 |
West coast style : modern homes and lifestyles in Canada, 1945-1995Shaw, Nancy (Nancy Alison), 1962- January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
|
25 |
A statistical analysis of sea level and wind stress at seven locations on the West Coast of North AmericaOsmer, Stephen Robert 26 July 1977 (has links)
Sea level and the alongshore component of wind stress data at
seven locations on the Pacific coast of Canada and the United States
were analyzed. The effective data period was from August 1, 1973 to
September 9, 1975. The seven locations were Tofino, British
Columbia; Neah Bay and Toke Point, Washington; South beach (Newport)
and Charleston, Oregon; and Crescent City and San Francisco,
California.
Sea level relative to the two year mean is higher at the northern
locations during the winter months than it is at the southern
stations. There appears to be an annual cycle in the sea level
though the amplitudes are different for the two years. The monthly
mean wind stress is northward during the winter months, and has a
larger value at the northern locations. During the spring and summer
the monthly mean wind stress is southward and has a larger value at
the southern stations.
Linear correlation analysis was performed on the sea level data
and on the alongshore component of wind stress for the entire time
period and seasonally. Auto-correlations and cross correlations were
computed for the adjusted sea levels and wind stress. This analysis
shows that the sea level and wind stress fluctuations among these
seven locations are coherent. These show that the correlation is
a function of location and that it has a seasonal variation. It also
appears that by examining plots of correlation coefficients and of
sea level slopes, that the region may be divided into two major
regimes. This separation might be interpreted as the locale where
the West Wind Drift impinges on the coast. / Graduation date: 1978
|
26 |
Biology of neustonic larval and juvenile fishes and crabs off Oregon, 1984Shenker, Jonathan M. 16 April 1985 (has links)
Graduation date: 1986
|
27 |
Subsurface currents off the Oregon coastStevenson, Merritt R. 11 March 1966 (has links)
Graduation date: 1966
|
28 |
Distribution and prediction of Swiss needle cast of Douglas-fir in coastal OregonRosso, Pablo H. 17 October 2001 (has links)
This study was directed to improve our understanding of the ecology of Swiss needle
cast (SNC) of Douglas-fir, a disease that produces extensive damage to forests and
plantation in the coastal region of Oregon and Washington. A disease prediction model
for the coastal area of Oregon was built by establishing the relationship between the
distribution of disease severity and the environment. Currently available methods of
determining the distribution of SNC were analyzed, and the possibility of mapping the
disease using Landsat TM satellite images was explored.
Two types of regression approaches were used to study the relationship between
disease severity and climate, topography, soil and forest stand characteristics. Although
both types provided useful information and insight, the multiple regression approach was
chosen over the regression tree analysis to build the model, due to its capacity to
produce a continuous prediction response.
Fog occurrence, precipitation, temperature, elevation and slope aspect, were the
variables that contributed to explain most of the disease severity variability. Findings
agree with and formalize our previous understanding of the ecology of SNC: cool and
wet conditions in summer appear to increase disease severity. When the model was
applied to past climate conditions, retrospective predictions suggest that changes in
climate in the last two decades could help to explain the observed recent regional
increase in SNC disease severity.
The resulting model was used to construct a disease prediction map. This map
showed an accuracy equivalent to the currently available SNC aerial survey. The
prediction model, however, is able to produce a continuous prediction surface, more
suitable for testing and appropriate for assisting in disease management and research.
A strong relationship between mature stand canopy defoliation and the Landsat TM
indices greenness and brightness, indicates that it is possible to use satellite imagery to
map SNC. In contrast, young stands showed high variability, most likely due to the
relatively high proportion of exposed understory vegetation.
The possibility of mapping stand defoliation is of great importance because this
symptom can be directly linked to tree growth and forest productivity. Satellite imagery
can be used in future and in retrospective disease mapping. / Graduation date: 2002
|
29 |
Taxonomy of some endophytic and epiphytic genera of Phaeophyta on the Oregon coastO'Flaherty, Mary Louise 11 May 1966 (has links)
Graduation date: 1966
|
30 |
An analysis of factors affecting resource usage in the Pacific Coast salmon fisheryAungurarat, Peerarat 06 August 1970 (has links)
Graduation date: 1971
|
Page generated in 0.0642 seconds