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| Author |
Article |
Issue |
| Michael Champ |
Sudies
of nuclear contamination in the Russian Arctic From
the 1950s to the 1980s, the communist government of the
Former Soviet Union (FSU) sent its most toxic and hazardous
industries to its vast, barren, and unpopulated polar region. |
Vol.3, Number2, Fall 1995 |
|
| Tamara Davis |
Icebound |
Vol.3, Number 2, Fall 1995 |
|
| Mahlon
Kennicutt |
Responses
to sublethal contaminant exposure You have heard
of catastrophic environmental damage caused by oil spills.
What happens to the marine environment when an oil platform
becomes a long-term component of the local ecology? GOOMEX
intends to find out. |
Vol. 3, Number 2, Fall 1995 |
|
LATEX A TEAM:
Norman
Guinasso
Frank Kelly
Jodi Hughes
Debra Defreitas
Woody Lee
|
Studying
circulation over the Texas-Lousiana Shelf The Louisiana-Texas
Shelf Physical Oceanography Program (LATEX) has as its principal
objective the identification of key dynamic processes governing
the circulation, transport, and cross-shelf mixing of the
waters on the Texas-Louisiana shelf. |
Vol. 4, Number 2, Summer 1996 |
|
| Ian
MacDonald |
Lair
of the "Ice Worm" Hydrate-dwelling worms are the
latest addition to the inventory of remarkable animals living
at hydrocarbon seeps in the gulf. |
Vol. 5, Number 3, Dec 1997
|
|
| Roger Sassen |
Gas
hydrate gardens of the Gulf of Mexico Gas hydrates
can hold small and large molecules of natural gas, and they
are far more plentiful than the world's coal and oil resources
combined. |
Vol. 5, Number 3, Dec 1997 |
|
Life's
prospects - Where will we find it next?
| Vol. 5, Number 3, Dec 1997 |
|
Voyage
to the depths
| Vol. 5, Number 3, Dec 1997 |
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