. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. "The Back Page" is an update on Sea Grant activities — on research, marine education and advisory services. It's also a good place to find out about meetings, workshops and new publi- cations. For more information on any of the projects described, contact the Sea Grant offices in Raleigh (919/737- 2454). For copies of publications, write UNC Sea Grant, NCSU, Box 8605, Raleigh, 27695-8605. The ad reads: BEACH HOUSE FOR SALE. Your eyebrows rise, your pulse quickens, and you read on. BRAND NEW


. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. "The Back Page" is an update on Sea Grant activities — on research, marine education and advisory services. It's also a good place to find out about meetings, workshops and new publi- cations. For more information on any of the projects described, contact the Sea Grant offices in Raleigh (919/737- 2454). For copies of publications, write UNC Sea Grant, NCSU, Box 8605, Raleigh, 27695-8605. The ad reads: BEACH HOUSE FOR SALE. Your eyebrows rise, your pulse quickens, and you read on. BRAND NEW TWO-STORY WITH A DECK AND GARAGE. ON THE OCEANFRONT. Before you turn your daydream into reality, pick up a copy of Your Place at the Beach: A Buyers Guide to Vaca- tion Real Estate. The attractive, 28-page booklet pub- lished by Sea Grant and the Real Estate Commission offers a thorough look at the fun and frustrations of own- ing coastal property. Written by Walter Clark, Sea Grant's coastal law specialist, the booklet addresses the environmental hazards, ownership options and costs associated with coastal real estate. And it can help you know what questions to ask sellers, real estate agents, government person- nel and attorneys. Whether you want to buy a vacant lot, townhouse, condominium, cottage or time share, Your Place at the Beach can help you make informed decisions. For a copy, write Sea Grant and ask for publication number UNCSG-87- 04. The cost is $ In the summer of 1983, an extensive blue-green algal bloom spread across the lower part of North Carolina's Neuse River. To learn more about the bloom and its causes, Sea Grant stu- died the factors that supported and sustained the algae's growth. Researchers Robert Christian, Donald Stanley and Deborah Daniel, all of East Carolina University, exam-. ined how chlorophyll, nitrogen, phos- phorus and carbon concentrations affected the bloom. Their findings are published in the new Sea Grant working paper Charac


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionunclibra, booksubjectoceanography