Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The main academic journal of the Society is the journal Freshwater Science. [33] 4 issues are published each year. The journal was first published in 1982 and called Freshwater Invertebrate Biology. In 1986 the title was changed to Journal of the North American Benthological Society, and the title was changed again in 2012 to Freshwater Science ...
Peter H. Gleick (/ ɡ l ɪ k /; born 1956) is an American scientist working on issues related to the environment. [1] He works at the Pacific Institute in Oakland, California, which he co-founded in 1987.
The Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security is an American non-profit research institute created in 1987 to provide independent research and policy analysis on issues of development, environment, and security, with a particular focus on global and regional freshwater issues.
The Freshwater Biological Association (FBA) is an independent scientific organisation founded in 1929 [1] in Cumbria [2] by Felix Eugen Fritsch, [3] William Harold Pearsall, [4] Francis Balfour-Browne, [5] and Robert Gurney [6] among others.
Neeskay, whose name was derived from the Ho-Chunk language, [9] is the Institute's main research vessel. In addition to Neeskay, the institute also has a fleet of small boats. [10] [better source needed] The WATER Institute also houses aquatic holding tanks for aquaculture and an instrumentation shop capable of making custom-made instruments. [11]
Gettin' Square is a 2003 comedy crime thriller film directed by Jonathan Teplitzky and written by Chris Nyst.An international co-production between Australia and the United Kingdom, it stars Sam Worthington, David Wenham, Freya Stafford, Gary Sweet, and Timothy Spall.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be on Capitol Hill this week for a series of meetings with senators after being chosen by President-elect Donald Trump to head up the U.S. Department of Health and Human ...
The Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (CEH) was formally established in March 1994 by John Krebs the then Chief Executive of NERC. It was formed by the drawing together of four research institutes: the Institute of Hydrology, the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, [6] the Institute of Freshwater Ecology and the Institute of Virology and Environmental Microbiology (IVEM).