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3 results for Coastwatch Vol. Issue 4, Autumn 2024
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Record #:
44342
Author(s):
Abstract:
"Seventy years ago, winds gusted to 90 mph in Raleigh, 110 mph in Fayetteville, and as high as 150 mph at the coast.' The author notes as the strongest hurricane based on the Saffir Simpson scale category, Hazel is an obvious benchmark on which all other storms are compared. It is possible, however, to have a Category-5 hurricane someday along North Carolina's coast.
Source:
Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue 4, Autumn 2024, p20-25, il, map Periodical Website
Subject(s):
Record #:
44343
Author(s):
Abstract:
"She had torn the south-facing beaches of Brunswick County all to hell and gone, wrecking the crab-and-fish houses and putting great schooners up into yards in Southport, and thrown fishing boats onto main streets in Morehead City and Beaufort."
Source:
Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue 4, Autumn 2024, p26-27, il Periodical Website
Subject(s):
Record #:
44356
Author(s):
Abstract:
Colleen Brow, the 2023-24 joint North Carolina Sea Grant and Space Grant Research Fellow and Ph.D. student began in her undergraduate years scanning sources of nutrient pollution in the lower Cape Fear River basin. with regard to concentrated animal feeding operations, her research found a correlation between the concentration of these facilities and areas with increased pollution.
Source:
Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue 4, Autumn 2024, p14-19, il, map Periodical Website