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With more than 11,000 entries, this volume is the first
extensive bibliography of North Carolina to incorporate books,
pamphlets, articles from hundreds of journals, and theses and
dissertations from scores of universities. Using the incomparable
holdings of the North Carolina Collection as well as other
libraries and institutions, Jones includes entries dating from the
first written description of North Carolina in 1524 through 1992.
Entries are arranged by chronological period, then by subject, with
author and subject indexes providing further access.
Entries are arranged by chronological period, then by subject,
with author and subject indexes providing further access. Among the
sources included are some that are seldom found in state
bibliographies, such as soil surveys of the counties and articles
in small journals, such as "The North Carolina Booklet." A separate
chapter features more then 3,000 entries by county. Another chapter
identifies libraries, archives and manuscript repositories,
museums, and historic sites.
In recent years, much concern has been expressed on the deleterious
effects that anthropogenic emissions of acidic pollutants have on
ecosystems of both industrialized countries and remote areas of the
world. In many of these regions, seasonal snowcover is a major
factor in the transfer of atmospheric pollutants, either to
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems or to the more permanent
reservoirs of glaciers and ice sheets. The recognition of the role
that seasonal snowcovers can thus play in the chemical dynamics of
whole ecosystems was recently echoed by the Committee on Glaciology
of the National Research Council (National Academy of Sciences,
National Academy of Engineering and the Institute of Medicine)
which recommended that studies on "Impurities in the snowpack,
their discharge into runoff, and management of the problem" be
rated at the highest prority level (ref. a). It is in this context
that the Advanced Research Institute (ASI) brought together
scientists active in the fields of snow physics, snow chemistry and
snow hydrology. The programme was structured so as to facilitate
the exchange of information and ideas on the theories for the
chemical evolution of seasonal snowcovers and snowmelt and on the
impact of the chemical composition of the meltwaters on the
different components of hydrological systems. As a consequence the
ASI also attracted participants from potential users of the
information that was disseminated; these were particularly
concerned with the effects of snowmelt and snowcover on terrestrial
biota and those of lakes and streams.
Every “legitimate” member of Revolutionary War soldier Francis
Jones's family (including his son-in-law Congressman James
Strudwick Smith) lies in a small cemetery near where the Smiths'
enslaved maid Harriet gave birth to four daughters, one fathered by
Jones's white lawyer grandson, three by the white physician
grandson. The four girls grew up with two “mothers”, for Miss
Mary Ruffin Smith, spinster sister of the licentious boys, took
them into the big house, baptized them into the Episcopal Church,
and then guided them to marriage to respectable biracial men. One
great-great-grandchild, Pauli Murray, became the first
African-American woman to be admitted to the clergy of the
Episcopal Church and has recently been named a saint in that
denomination. Her book Proud Shoes is based on her grandmother's
memories. The last “legitimate” survivor in her family, Miss
Mary Ruffin Smith left each biracial niece a token hundred acres.
The remainder of the Jones-Smith fortune she willed (1) to the
University of North Carolina for the establishment of scholarships
and the development of its campus utilities, and (2) to the work of
the North Carolina dioceses of the Episcopal Church, including
saving St. Mary's School in Raleigh and supporting the Chapel of
the Cross in Chapel Hill.
This memoir is an intimate and often irreverent account of one
man's coming of age during World War II. Born a North Carolina
farmboy, Jones served as a naval sonarman aboard a wooden submarine
chaser operating from Africa and Sicily during the Allied invasions
at Anzio and Southern France. He also served as sonarman and yeoman
on two fleet mine sweepers in the Okinawa, Formosa and China
operations. This memoir is drawn not only from memory, but from the
author's surviving diaries from the conflicts, daily logs of the
three ships upon which he served, and the secret reports of
military commanders and other official records.
In this volume, a multidisciplinary group of acknowledged experts
fully intergrate the physical, chemical, and biological sciences to
provide a complete understanding of the interrelationships between
snow structure and life. This volume opens a new perspecitve on
snow cover as a habitat for organisms under extreme environmental
conditions and as a key factor in the ecology of much of the
Earth's surface. The contributors describe the fundamental physical
and small-scale chemical processes that characterize the evolution
of snow and their influence on the life cycles of true snow
organisms and the biota of cold regions with extended snow cover.
The book further expands on the role of snow in the biosphere by
the study of the relationship between snow and climate and the
paleo-ecological evidence for the influence of past snow regimes on
plant communities. Snow Ecology will form a main textbook on
advanced courses in biology, ecology, geography, environmental
science, and earth science where an important component is devoted
to the study of the cryosphere. It will also be useful as a
reference text for graduate students, researchers, and
professionals at academic institutions and in government and
nongovernmental agencies with environmental concerns.
In recent years, much concern has been expressed on the deleterious
effects that anthropogenic emissions of acidic pollutants have on
ecosystems of both industrialized countries and remote areas of the
world. In many of these regions, seasonal snowcover is a major
factor in the transfer of atmospheric pollutants, either to
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems or to the more permanent
reservoirs of glaciers and ice sheets. The recognition of the role
that seasonal snowcovers can thus play in the chemical dynamics of
whole ecosystems was recently echoed by the Committee on Glaciology
of the National Research Council (National Academy of Sciences,
National Academy of Engineering and the Institute of Medicine)
which recommended that studies on "Impurities in the snowpack,
their discharge into runoff, and management of the problem" be
rated at the highest prority level (ref. a). It is in this context
that the Advanced Research Institute (ASI) brought together
scientists active in the fields of snow physics, snow chemistry and
snow hydrology. The programme was structured so as to facilitate
the exchange of information and ideas on the theories for the
chemical evolution of seasonal snowcovers and snowmelt and on the
impact of the chemical composition of the meltwaters on the
different components of hydrological systems. As a consequence the
ASI also attracted participants from potential users of the
information that was disseminated; these were particularly
concerned with the effects of snowmelt and snowcover on terrestrial
biota and those of lakes and streams.
In this volume, a multidisciplinary group of acknowledged experts fully intergrate the physical, chemical, and biological sciences to provide a complete understanding of the interrelationships between snow structure and life. This volume opens a new perspecitve on snow cover as a habitat for organisms under extreme environmental conditions and as a key factor in the ecology of much of the Earth's surface. The contributors describe the fundamental physical and small-scale chemical processes that characterize the evolution of snow and their influence on the life cycles of true snow organisms and the biota of cold regions with extended snow cover. The book further expands on the role of snow in the biosphere by the study of the relationship between snow and climate and the paleo-ecological evidence for the influence of past snow regimes on plant communities. Snow Ecology will form a main textbook on advanced courses in biology, ecology, geography, environmental science, and earth science where an important component is devoted to the study of the cryosphere. It will also be useful as a reference text for graduate students, researchers, and professionals at academic institutions and in government and nongovernmental agencies with environmental concerns.
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