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21 results for "Cape Fear River"
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Record #:
36291
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Built in 1899, the building once housing the Caffe Phoenix got a new lease on life, courtesy of developer magnates such as James Goodnight. Part of his vision for downtown Wilmington is it becoming the hub for tech startups and companies seeking office space in an urban area.
Record #:
24343
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Smithfield Foods of Virginia hopes to build a hog plant in Bladen County along the Cape Fear River. Though the proposed plant would bring money and jobs to the economically depressed area, many are worried about the environmental impacts the plant would have on the already polluted Cape Fear River.
Record #:
34779
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The North Carolina Community Collaborative Research Grant Program has established three research projects with new collaborators. These projects focus on flood risks, water contamination in the Cape Fear River, and evaluating resources of the nighttime sky at the Outer Albemarle Peninsula.
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Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue 3, Summer 2018, p42-44, il, map Periodical Website
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Record #:
35691
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Its original name was the “Meeting House”: its latter name, Cape Fear Baptist Church, inspired by the nearby stream. A Colonial construction, this church in Gray’s Creek was touted as one of the first erected in Cumberland County. Its value was also asserted by an illustrious history: a temporary hospital and bivouac site for General Sherman’s troops.
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Tar Heel (NoCar F 251 T37x), Vol. 6 Issue 5, Sept/Oct 1978, p49
Record #:
34719
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Whale sharks are occasional visitors to the coast of North Carolina, especially when warmer-than-average water travels up from the south. In 1934, a whale shark larger than 40 feet long was found dead in the Cape Fear River; Herbert Hutchinson Brimley, affiliate of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, was able to record the tail and create part of an exhibition. Since then, the whale shark has become a much more active part of the North Carolina ecosystem.
Record #:
15130
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Iron mining was a one time a quite sizable industry in the Upper Cape Fear River region. There is a large body of rich ore particularly in Chatham County where numerous mills and blast furnaces took advantage of the many tributaries of the Cape Fear River.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 8 Issue 45, Apr 1941, p8-9, 20, f
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Record #:
33167
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Hydrilla, a noxious aquatic weed plant, was recently identified in Woodlake in Moore County, North Carolina. This is the largest infestation found in the state and the first major infestation in the Cape Fear River Drainage Basin.
Record #:
28174
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The present status of longnose gar, Lepisosteus osseus (family Lepisosteidae) in North Carolina is reviewed, with emphasis on those captured in the Cape Fear River. Distribution, abundance, and length-weight relationships were compared to studies from other freshwater areas.
Record #:
43553
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Team-lead of the watershed ecology research group, Katherine Martin, and doctoral student, Elly Gay, have joined together in a North Carolina Sea Grant to address water pollution throughout the Cape Fear River Basin. Utilizing "riparian buffers," or land adjacent to a body of water providing conservation benefits, the research group plans to shed light on future urban expansion and the current decline in watersheds.
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Record #:
4931
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The Cape Fear River rises near Greensboro and empties into the Atlantic Ocean at Wilmington. The entire river basin covers over 9,000 square miles. Along the waterway lie 107 cities and towns and a population of almost two million. Preserving the water quality requires cooperation and flexibility among many groups. Smith discusses current plans to protect the waterway.
Source:
Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue , Winter 2001, p6-11, il Periodical Website
Record #:
13221
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Navigation on the Cape Fear River is tricky, and no master would attempt it without the knowledge of one of the seven licensed captains in the Wilmington-Cape Fear Pilots Association. The Association is a unique group rooted in the romantic traditions of the Civil War.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 23 Issue 26, May 1956, p8-9, f
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Record #:
33356
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The Cape Fear River Basin Study was a two-year effort to address the most critical water issues in North Carolina’s largest river basin. The study, which concluded in 1984, focused on water supply, wetlands, and instream flow needs for fish habitat. A summary report provides a synopsis of the study’s major findings and accomplishments.
Record #:
26346
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The Cape Fear River drainage system has received some new inhabitants when the NCWRC stocked it River and some of its tributaries with 32,000 spotted bass fingerlings.
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Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 22 Issue 3, Summer 1978, p22
Record #:
26434
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The first stocking of striped bass has occurred in coastal North Carolina. The Cape Fear River became home to around 20,000 striped bass, some of which have been tagged for further experimentation.
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Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 24 Issue (27) 3, Mar 1980, p16
Record #:
22009
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This article examines the founding and history of Clarendon County on the Cape Fear. Settled by English colonists from the island of Barbados, Clarendon County ultimately failed as a major colonial settlement in the southern colonies.
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