Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.
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7 results
for Coastwatch Vol. Issue , May/June 1994
Currently viewing results 1 - 7
Abstract:
The wild horses on North Carolina's Outer Banks have spawned debate as to their true origin. The horses roam a 175-mile stretch from the Virginia line to Carrot Island, and face an uncertain future as development encroaches on their habitat.
Abstract:
Whether alone or with an expedition, professional or amateur, fossil hunters will find North Carolina's Coastal Plain a natural museum of fossils ranging from a few thousand to eighty million years old.
Abstract:
Sea Grant researchers Robert Roer, Richard Dillaman, and Thomas Shafer from UNC-Wilmington's Center for Marine Science Research are studying the changes a crab undergoes when it sheds and what controls the hardening of its new shell.
Abstract:
Sea Grant specialists Walter Clark and Barbara Doll will be analyzing the state's management of its coastal areas and resources. Target subjects include wetlands, special area management, cumulative impacts of development, and ocean resources planning.
Abstract:
Using a copy of the North Carolina Geological Survey's \"Fossil Collecting in North Carolina,\" the author visits various fossil sites in the state and reports her findings.
Abstract:
North Carolina boasts the third largest estuarine system in the United States. The state has 2.3 million acres of estuaries, from which come ninety percent of commercial and recreational species of fish and shellfish.
Abstract:
Lundie Spence, a North Carolina Sea Grant marine education specialist, will lead a team of instructors and students from the Triangle area to the International Teachers Rain Forest Workshop in Iquitos, Peru. Spence will lead a workshop on tropical soils.