Books on the topic 'Temperate rain forest'

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1

British Columbia's inland rainforest: Ecology, conservation, and management. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2011.

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2

Temperate forest biomes. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 2008.

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3

Ellis, Gerry. America's rainforest. Minocqua, WI: NorthWord Press, 1991.

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4

Temperate and boreal rainforests of the world: Ecology and conservation. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2011.

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5

Nowacki, Gregory J. The effects of wind disturbance on temperate rain forest structure and dynamics of Southeast Alaska. Portland, Or: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1998.

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6

Nowacki, Gregory J. The effects of wind disturbance on temperate rain forest structure and dynamics of Southeast Alaska. Portland, Or: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1998.

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7

Moore, M. Keith. Coastal watersheds: An inventory of the watersheds in the coastal temperate forests of British Columbia. [British Columbia]: Earthlife Canada Foundation & Ecotrust/Conservation International, 1991.

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8

The Tundra. New York: Benchmark Books, 1995.

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9

Carlson, Toby N. A remotely sensed index of deforestation/urbanization for use in climate models: Annual performance report for the period 1 January 1995 - 31 December 1995. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University, 1995.

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10

Carlson, Toby N. A remotely sensed index of deforestation/urbanization for use in climate models: Annual performance report for the period 1 January 1995 - 31 December 1995. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University, 1995.

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11

Cole/Leeson. Wild America Habitats - Temperate Rain Forests (Wild America Habitats). Blackbirch Press, 2003.

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12

North Pacific Temperate Rainforests: Ecology and Conservation. University of Washington Press, 2013.

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13

Biodiversity Loss and Conservation in Fragmented forest Landscapes: The forests of Montane Mexico and Temperate South America. CABI, 2007.

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14

Biodiversity loss and conservation in fragmented forest landscapes: The forests of montane Mexico and temperate South America. Wallingford, UK: CABI, 2007.

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15

Biodiversity loss and conservation in fragmented forest landscapes: Evidence from tropical montane and south temperate rain forests in Latin America. Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK: CABI Pub., 2007.

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16

(Foreword), Patricia Marchak, Jerry F. Franklin (Foreword), Peter Schoonmaker (Editor), Bettina Von Hagen (Editor), and Edward C. Wolf (Editor), eds. The Rain Forests of Home: Profile Of A North American Bioregion. Island Press, 1997.

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17

(Foreword), Paul J. Hanson, and Stan D. Wullschleger (Editor), eds. North American Temperate Deciduous Forest Responses to Changing Precipitation Regimes (Ecological Studies). Springer, 2003.

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18

Nowhere Else on Earth: Standing Tall for the Great Bear Rainforest. Orca Book Publishers, 2011.

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19

United States. Forest Service. Alaska Region, ed. Conifers of the temperate rain forests of Alaska. [Washington, D.C.?]: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1999.

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20

1942-, Bunnell Fred L., and Dunsworth Glen B. 1952-, eds. Forestry and biodiversity: Learning how to sustain biodiversity in managed forests. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, 2009.

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21

1942-, Bunnell Fred L., and Dunsworth Glen B. 1952-, eds. Forestry and biodiversity: Learning how to sustain biodiversity in managed forests. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press, 2009.

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22

Erin, Kellogg, Ecotrust, and Conservation International, eds. Coastal temperate rain forests: Ecological characteristics, status and distribution worldwide. Portland, Ore: Ecotrust, 1992.

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23

Champollion, Lucas. Parts of a Whole. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198755128.001.0001.

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Why can I tell you that I ran for five minutes but not that I *ran all the way to the store for five minutes? Why can you say that there are five pounds of books in this package if it contains several books, but not *five pounds of book if it contains only one? What keeps you from using *sixty degrees of water to tell me the temperature of the water in your pool when you can use sixty inches of water to tell me its height? And what goes wrong when I complain that *all the ants in my kitchen are numerous? The constraints on these constructions involve concepts that are generally studied separately: aspect, plural and mass reference, measurement, and distributivity. This work provides a unified perspective on these domains, connects them formally within the framework of algebraic semantics and mereology, and uses this connection to transfer insights across unrelated bodies of literature and formulate a single constraint that explains each of the judgments above. This provides a starting point from which various linguistic applications of mereology are developed and explored. The main foundational issues, relevant data, and choice points are introduced in an accessible format.
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24

Miller, Brett A., Roch J. Shipley, Ronald J. Parrington, and Daniel P. Dennies, eds. Analysis and Prevention of Component and Equipment Failures. ASM International, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31399/asm.hb.v11a.9781627083294.

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Volume 11A provides information and insights on the factors that determine the useful service life of engineering components and the likely timing and mode of failure. It addresses nearly every stage of the product lifecycle from materials selection and design to manufacturing, operation, maintenance, and repair. It explains how to use life assessment methods to evaluate the effect of corrosion, fatigue, brittle fracture, elevated temperature, and other forms of damage. It also includes a section that examines the effects of casting, forming, welding, heat treating, and other manufacturing processes on component lifetime and performance. The final and by far largest section in the volume presents and analyzes the failure of metal shafts, fasteners, bearings, springs, and gears as well as pressure vessels, boilers, heat exchangers, pipelines, bridges, cranes, rail equipment, and medical devices. For information on the print version of Volume 11A, ISBN: 978-1-62708-327-0, follow this link.
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25

Benestad, Rasmus. Climate in the Barents Region. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.655.

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The Barents Sea is a region of the Arctic Ocean named after one of its first known explorers (1594–1597), Willem Barentsz from the Netherlands, although there are accounts of earlier explorations: the Norwegian seafarer Ottar rounded the northern tip of Europe and explored the Barents and White Seas between 870 and 890 ce, a journey followed by a number of Norsemen; Pomors hunted seals and walruses in the region; and Novgorodian merchants engaged in the fur trade. These seafarers were probably the first to accumulate knowledge about the nature of sea ice in the Barents region; however, scientific expeditions and the exploration of the climate of the region had to wait until the invention and employment of scientific instruments such as the thermometer and barometer. Most of the early exploration involved mapping the land and the sea ice and making geographical observations. There were also many unsuccessful attempts to use the Northeast Passage to reach the Bering Strait. The first scientific expeditions involved F. P. Litke (1821±1824), P. K. Pakhtusov (1834±1835), A. K. Tsivol’ka (1837±1839), and Henrik Mohn (1876–1878), who recorded oceanographic, ice, and meteorological conditions.The scientific study of the Barents region and its climate has been spearheaded by a number of campaigns. There were four generations of the International Polar Year (IPY): 1882–1883, 1932–1933, 1957–1958, and 2007–2008. A British polar campaign was launched in July 1945 with Antarctic operations administered by the Colonial Office, renamed as the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS); it included a scientific bureau by 1950. It was rebranded as the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in 1962 (British Antarctic Survey History leaflet). While BAS had its initial emphasis on the Antarctic, it has also been involved in science projects in the Barents region. The most dedicated mission to the Arctic and the Barents region has been the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), which has commissioned a series of reports on the Arctic climate: the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) report, the Snow Water Ice and Permafrost in the Arctic (SWIPA) report, and the Adaptive Actions in a Changing Arctic (AACA) report.The climate of the Barents Sea is strongly influenced by the warm waters from the Norwegian current bringing heat from the subtropical North Atlantic. The region is 10°C–15°C warmer than the average temperature on the same latitude, and a large part of the Barents Sea is open water even in winter. It is roughly bounded by the Svalbard archipelago, northern Fennoscandia, the Kanin Peninsula, Kolguyev Island, Novaya Zemlya, and Franz Josef Land, and is a shallow ocean basin which constrains physical processes such as currents and convection. To the west, the Greenland Sea forms a buffer region with some of the strongest temperature gradients on earth between Iceland and Greenland. The combination of a strong temperature gradient and westerlies influences air pressure, wind patterns, and storm tracks. The strong temperature contrast between sea ice and open water in the northern part sets the stage for polar lows, as well as heat and moisture exchange between ocean and atmosphere. Glaciers on the Arctic islands generate icebergs, which may drift in the Barents Sea subject to wind and ocean currents.The land encircling the Barents Sea includes regions with permafrost and tundra. Precipitation comes mainly from synoptic storms and weather fronts; it falls as snow in the winter and rain in the summer. The land area is snow-covered in winter, and rivers in the region drain the rainwater and meltwater into the Barents Sea. Pronounced natural variations in the seasonal weather statistics can be linked to variations in the polar jet stream and Rossby waves, which result in a clustering of storm activity, blocking high-pressure systems. The Barents region is subject to rapid climate change due to a “polar amplification,” and observations from Svalbard suggest that the past warming trend ranks among the strongest recorded on earth. The regional change is reinforced by a number of feedback effects, such as receding sea-ice cover and influx of mild moist air from the south.
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26

Dk Publishing. Mammals. DK CHILDREN, 2003.

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27

Remotely sensed index of deforestation/urbanization for use in climate models: Annual performance report for the period 1 January 1996 - 31 December 1996 for NASA grant no. NAGW-4250. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University, Office of Sponsored Programs, 1996.

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