242 resultados para Cross-shore profile


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"June 1982."

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"January 1981."

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"February 1982."

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"January 1983."

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"Contract No. AT(30-1)-2897."

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Shorelines tend to retreat landward as water levels rise. Less than 20 percent of the shore, lost as Lake Michigan rose between 1967 and 1976, was due to direct inundation; the remaining 80 percent was due to increased erosion in response to the higher lake levels. A simple correlation of lake level change and simultaneous shore retreat ignores the inevitable lag between process and response, but still accounts for 50 percent of the variance in shore retreat. A graphic summary of field data is presented to estimate effects of future lake level changes in similar coastal environments. Qualitative guidance is provided on how and when these estimates should be adjusted to reflect differences in environmental settings. Complete adjustment of the shore will be underestimated by the empirical relationship; but where lake levels change constantly, there will be many such instances of incomplete shore response. (Author).

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A study is made of the preferred orientation that occurs as a result of cross-rolling uranium sheet. The study is made by the use of inverse-pole figures and calculated thermal expansion coefficients.

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"Compiled through the ... efforts of James Stark"--p. 1.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Cover title.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Cover title.

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"Sponsored by Project SQUID which is supported by the Office of Naval Research under Contract Nonr-1858(25), NR-098-038."