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Issues covered in this study "include the changing image of female
scientists, the changing work atmosphere, the increase in the
number of women scientists, and female participation in research
groups. The authors also discuss special challenges facing women
scientists, including problems raised by high endurance jobs and
gender equality in pay and promotion." (Library Journal)..
This volume represents a collection of pioneering papers
introducing immunochemical techniques to the aquatic sciences. It
is the product of a workshop entitled "Immunochemical Approaches to
Coastal, Estuarine and Oceanographic Questions" held at the
University of Southern Maine, Portland, Oct. 5-7, 1986. Funding
from many sources made this workshop possible, and is gratefully
acknowledged. The reader will note great variability in both the
quality and scope of the papers which we have divided 'into four
sections: I. Background material on the immune system (borrowed
from a recent NIH publication) II. Background material related to
aquatic sciences III. Techniques IV. Applications Readers familiar
with terminology are directed to start with the original
contributions related to aquatic sciences, page 21. Some of the
contributions are abstracts only. Others are preliminary, for which
we are grateful to the authors for their willingness to share
recent sometimes tentative findings with a broader community. Some
offer novel and tempting insights, but as they exist, lack adequate
standards and controls. Others are thorough and represent major
scientific contributions. The promise rests in generating and
working with reagents of great specificity enabling orders of
magnitude improvements in the sensitivity of our measurements.
Authors also address the problems and limitations. We thank the
numerous authors and reviewers. In support of every successful
endeavor is someone of unusual savvy. For us, this has been David
A. Phinney. His leadership, wisdom and wit have been important to
the introduction of flow cytometry/sorting and immunochemistry into
aquatic research.
This book represents an outgrowth of an interdisciplinary session
held at the Seventh International Estuarine Research Federation
Conference held at Virginia Beach, Virginia, OCLober 1983. At that
meeting, the participants agreed to contribute to and develop a
monograph entitled "Tidal Mixing and Plankton Dynamics" by inviting
an expanded group of authors to contribute chapters on this theme.
The emphasis would be to review and summarize the considerable body
of knowledge that has accumulated over the last decade or so on the
fundamental role tidal mixing plays in energetic shallow seas and
estuaries in stimulating and controlling biological production. We
have attempted to provide a mix of contributions, composed of
reviews of the state-of-the-art, reports on current research activi
ties, summaries of the design and testing of a new generation of
innovative instruments for biological and chemical sampling and
sorting, and some imaginative ideas for future experiments on
stimulated mixing in continental shelf seas. We encouraged the
contributors to present critical and thought provoking assessments
of current wisdom specifying the sorts of techniques and
observational strategies needed to validate the various hypotheses
linking physical structure, mixing and circulation to plankton
biomass and production. We hope this volume will appeal to incoming
research students and established scholars alike. We certainly have
enjoyed working with all the authors in compiling this book. We
thank the numerous scientists who have served as reviewers, P.
Boisvert for typing the manuscripts and W. Bellows for
proofreading."
A revised edition of the classic work, originally published by the
Peabody Museum of Salem. One of the best handbooks available for
those interested in exploring the seashore populations and general
ecology of northern New England waters and Cape Ann. The perfect
companion guide for the serious student of marine biology or the
enthusiastic amateur adventurer and ecologist. "A new printing of
this book could not be more timely. If you take it and go down to
the water, I imagine you will return again and again, and like the
authors, be inspired to love and protect the sea that is all about
us." From the Foreword by Deborah Cramer, Author of Smithsonian
Ocean: Our Water Our World "The Sea is All About Us has been a
treasured guide for over 40 years and endures as the best handbook
available for exploring this stretch of New England coast. I am
delighted that it has been updated and reprinted, so I can continue
to recommend it for all who seek to know more about this region's
remarkable marine and coastal habitats." Jane Winchell, The Sarah
Fraser Robbins Director, Art & Nature Center, Peabody Essex
Museum "A very useful companion for a trip to this fascinating
habitat, whether it is your first trip to the tide zone or you are
returning to visit 'slimy old friends.'" Edward S. Gilfillan,
Bowdoin College "I am delighted to see this field guide being
reprinted. It was a welcome text for laymen and field biology
classes 40 years ago and has stood the test of time." Sandra E.
Shumway, University of Connecticut "You are holding in your hot
little hands one of the best field companions to the intertidal
marine life of Cape Ann and the Gulf of Maine. More than just a dry
taxonomic guide, Robbins and Yentsch do a superb job of making
sense of the diverse intertidal environments of northern New
England. Designed to be thrown in your backpack along with your
water, hat and binoculars, it will help you interpret the secret
world found in those intertidal cracks and crevices, a magical
world of unbelievable biodiversity and wonder. Rachel Carson would
be proud " Barney Balch, Bigelow Lab for Ocean Sciences, East
Boothbay, Maine
This volume explores the contemporary status of women scientists in
the predominantly male oriented world of science. Qualitative
interviews offer first-hand stories and tips from women who have
found success in medicine, academia, engineering and the
bioengineering firms.
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