Great Earthquakes, Abundant Sand, and High Wave Energy in the Columbia Cell, U.S.A.
What Happens at the Seabed off a Headland during a Tropical Cyclone
Prospecting for Sand: Offshore New Jersey
Use of Stable Isotopes for Tracking an Aragonite Beach Fill
Morphodynamic Modelling of Dredged Trenches and Channels
Modeling the Fate of Dredged Material Placed at an Open Water Disposal SiTe in Upper Chesapeake Bay, USA
Simulating the Fate of Dredged Material: Columbia River, U.S.A.
Aeolian Sand Transport and Vegetation in Front of a Foredune
High Strength Concrete
This proceedings,
Materials and Construction
Exploring the Connection
This proceedings,
Metal Building Systems: A New Look
The use of metal building systems in low-rise, non-residential construction under 150,000 square feet has grown from less than 50 percent in 1986 to almost 70 percent today. Such systems...
Field Monitoring of Copper Concentrations in Estuaries and Creeks of Virginia's Eastern Shore
Assessing Radioactivity at U.S. Department of Energy Sites
Membrane Characterization and Membrane Material Optimization
Adsorption and Biodegradation of High Explosives on Granular Activated Carbon
Bayesian Statistics in Environmental Engineering Planning
Formulation of a Better Synthetic Gasoline for Use in Soil Vapour Extraction Experiments
A Risk-Based Approach to Subsurface NORM Disposal
(No paper) Naturally occurring radioactive materials (NORM) has become an environmental concern for the petroleum industry. NORM scales results when naturally occurring radium co-precipitates...
Theoretical and Empirical Implications of Increasing Block Rates
(No paper) The U.S. Army disposed chemical agents, laboratory materials, and unexploded ordnance at the O-Field landfill from before World War II until at least the 1950s. Soil, ground...
The Emergence of Spill Prevention Concerns for Water Resources
In Regions where water pollution control programs have succeeded in cleaning up our waters, spills from fixed installations and vessels, trucks and trains continue to represent a very...
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