. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. grass plantings can help slow shoreline erosion. If you want to know more, contact Spencer Rogers, Marine Ad- visory Service, Marine Resources Center/Ft. Fisher, Kure Beach, 28449. Sea Grant Publica- tions is an updated brochure that lists all of UNC Sea Grant's general-interest publica- tions. The brochure provides a brief descrip- tion of each publication and lists its price, if there is a change. The brochure also provides an order form that can be filled out and sent to the Sea Grant office i


. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. grass plantings can help slow shoreline erosion. If you want to know more, contact Spencer Rogers, Marine Ad- visory Service, Marine Resources Center/Ft. Fisher, Kure Beach, 28449. Sea Grant Publica- tions is an updated brochure that lists all of UNC Sea Grant's general-interest publica- tions. The brochure provides a brief descrip- tion of each publication and lists its price, if there is a change. The brochure also provides an order form that can be filled out and sent to the Sea Grant office in Raleigh for quick processing. For your free publications list, write UNC Sea Grant, Box 5001, Raleigh, 27650. Seacoast Life: an ecological guide to natural seashore com- munities in North Carolina, by Judith M. Spitsbergen of the Hampton Mariners Museum in Beaufort, describes the dunes, tidal flats, marshes, plants, organisms and critters that make up coastal North Carolina. An ideal field guide for teachers and students, the illustrated book focuses on coastal ecology rather than on the identification of individual plants or animals. Funding for the book was provided by UNC Sea Grant and the North Carolina State Museum of Natural History. For a copy of the guide, make a check payable to NCDA Museum Extension Fund for $ ($ plus $1 for postage and han- dling). Send the check to Museum Publications, Box 27647, Raleigh, 27611. Or you can buy a copy by dropping by the Natural History Museum in Raleigh or the Hampton Mariners Museum in Beaufort. Shellfish Relay: A Preliminary Review of Potential Gains from Alternative Property Rights in Southeastern North Carolina, by Easley and James D. Seabolt of. the NCSU Department of Economics and Business, discuoses the alter- natives for and economics of relaying or transferring contaminated shellfish from polluted water to clean water. For a copy, write UNC Sea Grant and ask for UNC-SG-WP-81-1. The work- ing pap


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionunclibra, booksubjectoceanography