Section 10 References Abbott, R., E

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Section 10 References Abbott, R., E Section 10 References Abbott, R., E. Bing-Sawyer, and R. Blizard. 2002. Assessment of pile driving impacts on the Sacramento blackfish (Othodon microlepidotus). Draft report prepared for Caltrans District 4. October 10, 2002. Sacramento, CA. Abbott, R.R., J.A. Reyff, and G. Marty. 2005. Monitoring the effects of conventional pile driving on three species of fish. Final Report. Strategic Environmental Consulting, Inc. Manson Construction Company. Richmond, CA. American Fisheries Society. 1991. Common and scientific names of fishes from the United States and Canada. Special Publication 20. Bethesda, MD. Anchor Environmental. 2004. Marine Shoreline Inventory Report. Final report. Prepared for Seattle Public Utilities. Seattle, WA. 46p. Anthony, R. G., R. J. Steidl, and K. McGarigal. 1995. Recreation and bald eagles in the Pacific Northwest. pp. 223-241, in R.L. Knight and K. J. Gutzwiller. Wildlife and Recreationists: coexistence through management and research. Island Press. Washington, DC. 372p. Anthony, R.G. and F.B. Isaacs. 1989. Characteristics of bald eagle nest sites in Oregon. Journal of Wildlife Management. 53:148-159. Asper, E.D., G.W. Young, and M.T. Walsh. 1988. Observations on the birth and development of a captive born killer whale. International Zoo Yearbook 27:295- 304. Asplund, T.R. 2000. The effects of motorized watercraft on aquatic ecosystems. PUBL- SS-948-00. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. Madison WI. March 17, 2000. Available at: 24TUhttp://dnr.wi.gov/org/water/fhp/papers/lakes.pdfU24T Awbrey, F. T. and A.E. Bowles. 1990. The effects of aircraft noise and sonic booms on raptors: a preliminary model and a synthesis on the literature on disturbance. U.S. Air Force, Patterson Air Force Base, OH. www.seattle.gov/util/SeattleBiologicalEvaluation SBE by City of Seattle 10-1 Bain, D. 1990. Examining the validity of inferences drawn from photo-identification data, with special reference to studies of the killer whale (Orcinus orca) in British Columbia. Report of the International Whaling Commission, Special Issue 12:93-100. Baird, R.W. 2000. The killer whale—foraging specializations and group hunting. In J. Mann, R. C. Connor, P. L. Tyack, and H. Whitehead, editors, Cetacean societies: field studies of dolphins and whales, Pages 127-153. University of Chicago Press. Chicago, IL. Baird, R.W. and L.M. Dill. 1995. Occurrence and behaviour of transient killer whales: seasonal and pod-specific variability, foraging behaviour, and prey handling. Canadian Journal of Zoology 73:1300-1311. Baird, R.W. and L.M. Dill. 1996. Ecological and social determinants of group size in transient killer whales. Behavioral Ecology 7:408-416. Baker, C.S., L.M. Herman, A. Perry, W.S. Lawton, J.M. Straley, A.A. Wolman, G.D. Kaufman, H.E. Winn, J.D. Hall, J.M. Reinke, and J. Ostman. 1986. Migratory movement and population structure of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the central and eastern North Pacific. Marine Ecology Progress Series 31:105-119. Balcomb, K.C. and C.A. Goebel. 1976. A killer whale study in Puget Sound. Final report, Contract No. NASO-6-35330. Marine Mammal Division, National Marine Fisheries Service. Seattle, WA. 11p. Ballinger, D. 2000. Unpublished data of Lummi Nation Fisheries Department’s beach seine surveys of Bellingham Bay, Lummi Bay, and Cherry Point in 1994 and 1995. Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission. Barnhart, R.A. 1986. Species profiles: life histories and environmental requirements of coastal fishes and invertebrates (Pacific Southwest)—steelhead. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 82(11.60). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, TR EL-B2-4. 21p. Barrett-Lennard, L.G. 2000. Population structure and mating patterns of killer whales as revealed by DNA analysis. Ph.D. Thesis, University of British Columbia. Vancouver, BC. Barrett-Lennard, L.G. and G.M. Ellis. 2001. Population structure and genetic variability in northeastern Pacific killer whales: towards an assessment of population viability. Research Document 2001/065, Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Nanaimo, BC. Barrett-Lennard, L. G., J. K. B. Ford, and K. Heise. 1996. The mixed blessing of echolocation: differences in sonar use by fish-eating and mammal-eating killer whales. Animal Behaviour 51:553-565. www.seattle.gov/util/SeattleBiologicalEvaluation SBE by City of Seattle 10-2 Barwick, R.D., T.J. Kwak, R.L. Noble, and D.H. Barwick. 2004. Fish populations associated with habitat-modified piers and natural woody debris in Piedmont Carolina Reservoirs. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 24:1120- 1133. Bash, J., C. Berman, and S. Bolton. 2001. Effects of turbidity and suspended solids on salmonids. Center for Streamside Studies, University of Washington, November 2001. Seattle, WA. Battin, J., M.W. Wiley, M.H. Ruckelshaus, R.N. Palmer, E. Korb, K.K. Bartz, and H. Imaki. 2007. Projected impacts of climate change on salmon habitat restoration. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(16):6720-6725. Baxter, C.V. and F.R. Hauer. 2000. Geomorphology, hyporheic exchange, and the selection of spawning habitat by bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus). Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 57:1470-1481. Baxter, J.S. and J.D. McPhail. 1997. Diel microhabitat preferences of juvenile bull trout in an artificial stream channel. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 17:975-980. Bayley, P.B. 1995. Understanding large river-floodplain ecosystems. Bioscience 45:153-160. Beamer, E. and R. Henderson. 2004. Skagit Delta and Bay habitat use data report. Appendix E: Bull Trout in the nearshore. Prepared for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Seattle District. Seattle, WA. Beamer, E. M. and R.A. Henderson. 1998. Juvenile salmonid use of natural and hydromodified stream bank habitat in the mainstem Skagit River, Northwest Washington. Miscellaneous report. Skagit Systems Cooperative, LaConner, WA, Madison, WI. Beamish, R.J. and C.M. Neville. 1995. Pacific salmon and Pacific herring mortalities in the Fraser River plume caused by river lamprey (Lampetra ayresi). Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 52: 644-650. Beamish, R.J., M. Folkes, R. Sweeting, and C. Manken. 1998. Intra-annual changes in the abundance of coho, Chinook, and chum salmon in Puget Sound in 1997. Pages 531-541. In Puget Sound Water Quality Action Team, Puget Sound Research 1998. Olympia, WA. Behnke, R.J. 1992. Native trout of western North America. American Fisheries Society Monograph 6. Bethesda, MD. Beissinger, S.R. 1995. Population trends of the marbled murrelet projected from demographic analyses. In: C.J. Ralph, G.L. Hunt, M.G. Raphael, and J. F. Piatt (Technical editors), Ecology and Conservation of the Marbled Murrelet. General Technical Report. PSW-GTR-152. Pacific Southwest Experiment Station, Forest Service. Albany, CA. 420p. www.seattle.gov/util/SeattleBiologicalEvaluation SBE by City of Seattle 10-3 Béland, P., S. De Guise, C. Girard, A. Lagacé, D. Martineau, R. Michaud, D.C.G. Muir, R.J. Norstrom, E. Pelletier, S. Ray, and L.R. Shugart. 1993. Toxic compounds and health and reproductive effects in St. Lawrence beluga whales. Journal of Great Lakes Research 19:766-775. Berg, L. and T.G. Northcote. 1985. Changes in territorial, gill-flaring, and feeding behavior in juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) following short-term pulses of suspended sediment. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 42: 1410-1417. Bergman, A., M. Olsson, and S. Reiland. 1992. Skull-bone lesions in the Baltic grey seal (Halichoerus grypus). Ambio 21:517-519. Beschta, R.L., J.R. Boyle, C.C. Chambers, W.P. Gibson, S.V. Gregory, J. Grizzel, J.C. Hagar, J.L. Li, W.C. McComb, T.W. Parzybok, M.L. Reiter, G.H. Talyor, J.E. Warila. 1995. Cumulative effects of forest practices in Oregon: literature and synthesis. Prepared for Oregon Department of Forestry. Salem, OR. Bigg, M.A., G.M. Ellis, J.K.B. Ford, and K.C. Balcomb. 1987. Killer whales: A study of their identification, genealogy, and natural history in British Columbia and Washington State. Phantom Press and Publishers, Inc. Nanaimo, BC. 79p. Binford, L.C., B.G. Elliot, and S.W. Singer. 1975. Discovery of a nest and the downy young of the Marbled Murrelet. Wilson Bull. 87:303-319. Birtwell, Ian K. 1999. The Effects of Sediment on Fish and Their Habitat. Canadian Stock Assessment Secretariat Research Document 99/139. Bishop, S. and A. Morgan. 1996. Critical habitat issues by basin for natural chinook stocks in the Coastal and Puget Sound areas of Washington State. Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission. Olympia, WA. Bisson, P.A. and R.E. Bilby. 1982. Avoidance of suspended sediments by juvenile coho salmon. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 2:371-374. Bisson, P.A., R.E. Bilby, M.D. Bryant, C.A. Dolloff, G.B. Grette, R.A. House, M.L. Murphy, K.V. Koski and J.R. Sedell. 1987. Large woody debris in forested streams in the Pacific Northwest: past, present, and future. Pages 143-190. In Streamside management: forestry and fishery interactions. E.O. Salo and T.W. Cundy, editors, University of Washington, Institute of Forest Resources. Seattle, WA. Bjornn, T.C., M.A. Brusven, M.P. Molnau, J.H. Milligan, R.A. Klamt, E. Chacho, and C. Schaye. 1977. Transport of granitic sediment in streams and its effects on insects and fish. University of Idaho, Idaho cooperative Fisheries Research Unit, Completion Report, Project B-036-IDA, Bulletin 17. Moscow, ID. Bjornn, T.C. and D.W. Reiser. 1991. Habitat requirement of salmonids in streams. Pages 83-138. In: Influences of forest and rangeland management on salmonid www.seattle.gov/util/SeattleBiologicalEvaluation SBE by City of Seattle 10-4 fishes and their habitats. Editor: Meehan WR. American Fisheries Society Special Publication 19. Black, N.A., A. Schulman-Janiger, R.L. Ternullo, and M. Guerrero-Ruiz. 1997. Killer whales of California and Western Mexico: A catalog of photo-identified individuals.
Recommended publications
  • Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington
    Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington Professional Paper 1661-E U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Other than this note, this page left intentionally blank. Earthquake Hazards of the Pacific Northwest Coastal and Marine Regions Robert Kayen, Editor Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington By Robert E. Kayen and Walter A. Barnhardt The delta front of the Duwamish River valley near Elliott Bay and Harbor Island is founded on young Holocene deposits shaped by sea-level rise, episodic volcanism, and seismicity. These river-mouth deposits are highly susceptible to seismic soil liquefac- tion and are potentially prone to submarine landsliding and disintegrative flow failure. Professional Paper 1661-E U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey ii U.S. Department of the Interior DIRK KEMPTHORNE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Mark D. Myers, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2007 This report and any updates to it are available at: http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/pp1661e/ For product and ordering information: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS For more information on the USGS — the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS Manuscript approved for publication, May 29, 2007 Text edited by Peter Stauffer Layout by David R. Jones Suggested citation: Kayen, R.E., and Barnhardt, W.A., 2007, Seismic stability of the Duwamish River delta, Seattle, Washington: U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Phase 1 Final Report
    AMHS GOVERNANCE STUDY Phase 1 Final Report Prepared for: Southeast Conference • Juneau, AK Ref: 16086-001-030-0 Rev. - December 31, 2016 Southeast Conference AMHS Governance Study 12/31/16 PREPARED BY Elliott Bay Design Group 5305 Shilshole Ave. NW, Ste. 100 Seattle, WA 98107 McDowell Group 9360 Glacier Hwy., Ste. 201 Juneau, AK 99801 NOTES Cover photo courtesy of Alaska Floats My Boat. ELLIOTT BAY DESIGN GROUP Job: 16086 By: RIW AMHS Reform Final Report.docx Rev. - Page: i Southeast Conference AMHS Governance Study 12/31/16 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Project Overview Phase One of the AMHS Strategic Operational and Business Plan was developed by Elliott Bay Design Group (EBDG) and McDowell Group. The study identified alternative governance structures that could help the Alaska Marine Highway System (AMHS) achieve financial sustainability. This statewide effort was managed by Southeast Conference and guided by a 12- member steering committee of stakeholders from across Alaska. Project tasks included a high-level examination of six basic ferry governance models to assess their suitability for Alaska’s unique geography, markets, and transportation needs. More detailed case studies were conducted with three ferry systems to identify ideas and lessons applicable to AMHS: British Columbia Ferry System, Steamship Authority (Massachusetts), and CalMac Ferries (Scotland). The study also included review of relevant AMHS reports and interviews with key AMHS contacts including senior management and union representatives. The project incorporated extensive public involvement including convening a Statewide Marine Transportation Summit, solicitation of feedback through the project website, outreach to municipal governments and trade organizations throughout Alaska, and a presentation and discussion at Southeast Conference Annual Meeting.
    [Show full text]
  • X-Ray Magazine | Issue 43
    AquaCorps :: Dive Volunteerism :: UWPhoto Flash Photography British Columbia Port Hardy Sweden GLOBAL EDITION Tech Wreck July 2011 Number 43 Park Caribbean Southern Belize Ecology Mangroves China PACIFIC Qian Dao Lake Sharks Yap Broadnose Sevengill 1 X-RAY MAG : 43 : 2011 COVER PHOTO BY BARB ROY DIRECTORY X-RAY MAG is published by AquaScope Media ApS Frederiksberg, Denmark www.xray-mag.com PUBLISHER SENIOR EDITOR & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Michael Symes, PhD Peter Symes [email protected] Hawksbill sea turtle, Southern Belize. Photo by Kate Clark [email protected] SECTION EDITORS PUBLISHER / EDITOR Michael Arvedlund, PhD contents & CREATIVE DIRECTOR - Ecology Gunild Symes Scott Bennett - Photo & Travel [email protected] Andrey Bizyukin, PhD - Features Mathias Carvalho - Wrecks ASSOCIATE EDITORS Wayne Fenior - Equipment & REPRESENTATIVES Simon Kong - News, Books Americas & Europe Kelly LaClaire - Whale Tales Arnold Weisz Catherine Lim - News, Books [email protected] Bonnie McKenna - Turtle Tales Cindy Ross - GirlDiver Russia Arnold Weisz - News, Features Andrey Bizyukin, PhD, Moscow [email protected] CORRESPONDENTS Robert Aston - CA, USA Svetlana Murashkina, PhD, Moscow Enrico Cappeletti - Italy [email protected] John Collins - Ireland Marcelo Mammana - Argentina South East Asia Nonoy Tan - The Philippines Catherine GS Lim, Singapore [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS THIS ISSUE Scott Bennett ASSISTANT EDITORS Daniel Brinckmann & REPRESENTATIVES Kate Clark UNITED KINGDOM Aaron Gekoski Roz Lunn, London Julia Golosiy [email protected] Wayne Grant Bob Halstead USA East Coast Tyge Dahl Hermansen Millis Keegan, Fort Lauderdale Scott Johnson [email protected] Brian Keegan Wayne Fenior, Orlando Millis Keegan [email protected] Elaine Kwee Kelly LaClaire USA Pacific Northwest/Canada Rosemary E Lunn Barb Roy, Vancouver Barb Roy [email protected] Don Silcock Kelly LaClaire, Oregon Gunild Symes [email protected] Peter Symes 18 26 34 60 plus..
    [Show full text]
  • Puget Sound) and Hyas Chuck (Lake Washington), the Hills Along This Part of the Bay Sloped Steeply Into the Waters
    HISTORY: PARK 11/6/76 When the Duwamish tribe inhabited the land between the Whulge (Puget Sound) and Hyas Chuck (Lake Washington), the hills along this part of the bay sloped steeply into the waters. The flat strip along the waterfront, from Yesler Way to Smith Cove is the result of fills. European explorers renamed many geographic features. In 1791 Captain Vancouver Puget Sound to honor Lt. Peter Puget of his crew. The Wilkes Expedition of 1841 honored a crew member; Edward Me any claims it was the chaplian. Rev. J. L. Elliott, but in 1954 Howard Hanson found that Midshipman Samuel Elliott was honored with the name for Elliott Bay. Lake Washington was in 1854 by Thomas Mercer, The Denny Party landed at Alki Beach in November of 1851 to establish a permanent settle- ment. They had scarcely finished construction of four cabins when a passing brig stopped, looking for a cargo of timber piles which the settlers eagerly provided. But it was obvious that water off shore was for a harbor. So they changed the site of the settle- ment to the shore of Elliott Bay. In 1853 Henry Yesler arrived and the commercial development of the waterfront with the construction of a sawmill. At first, skid roads, wagons and boats were able to supply the demands of the vessels from San Francisco and other ports of call, but when coal was discovered in the 1860's a faster means of overland transport was needed - the railroad. Tracks were laid from the growing town to the south end of Lake Union and by 1374 went to Renton and the mines of New Castle.
    [Show full text]
  • Potential Nearshore Habitat Gains Analysis: Boeing Creek Delta 1
    POTENTIAL NEARSHORE HABITAT GAINS ANALYSIS: BOEING CREEK DELTA Prepared for City of Shoreline Prepared by Herrera Environmental Consultants, Inc. Note: Some pages in this document have been purposely skipped or blank pages inserted so that this document will copy correctly when duplexed. POTENTIAL NEARSHORE HABITAT GAINS ANALYSIS: BOEING CREEK DELTA Prepared for City of Shoreline 17500 Midvale Avenue North Shoreline, Washington 98133-4905 Prepared by Herrera Environmental Consultants, Inc. 2200 Sixth Avenue, Suite 1100 Seattle, Washington 98121 Telephone: 206-441-9080 February 3, 2017 CONTENTS Executive Summary ....................................................................................................................................................... iii Introduction....................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Methods.............................................................................................................................................................................. 3 Comparison of Pipers Creek and Boeing Creek Basins ..................................................................................... 4 Results ................................................................................................................................................................................. 6 Boeing Creek Delta ...............................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Resources Survey and Inventory
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND HISTORIC RESOURCES SURVEY AND INVENTORY Prepared for: City of Bainbridge Island November 2, 2017 146 N Canal St, Suite 111 • Seattle, WA 98103 • www.confenv.com This page intentionally left blank for double‐sided printing BAINBRIDGE ISLAND HISTORIC RESOURCES SURVEY AND INVENTORY DAHP PROJECT NUMBER 2017-05-03597 Prepared for: City of Bainbridge Island 280 Madison Avenue N. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Attn: Heather Wright, Senior Planner Authored by: Beth Dodrill and Connie Walker Gray Confluence Environmental Company November 2, 2017 146 N Canal St, Suite 111 • Seattle, WA 98103 • www.confenv.com This page intentionally left blank for double‐sided printing BAINBRIDGE ISLAND SURVEY AND INVENTORY TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Summary of Findings ................................................................................................................................ 1 1.2 Acknowledgements .................................................................................................................................. 2 2.0 HISTORIC OVERVIEW AND ARCHITECTURAL FRAMEWORK ........................................................................ 3 2.1 Historic Overview ...................................................................................................................................... 3 2.2 Predominant Architectural Styles on Bainbridge Island ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • This City of Ours
    THIS CITY OF OURS By J. WILLIS SAYRE For the illustrations used in this book the author expresses grateful acknowledgment to Mrs. Vivian M. Carkeek, Charles A. Thorndike and R. M. Kinnear. Copyright, 1936 by J. W. SAYRE rot &?+ *$$&&*? *• I^JJMJWW' 1 - *- \£*- ; * M: . * *>. f* j*^* */ ^ *** - • CHIEF SEATTLE Leader of his people both in peace and war, always a friend to the whites; as an orator, the Daniel Webster of his race. Note this excerpt, seldom surpassed in beauty of thought and diction, from his address to Governor Stevens: Why should I mourn at the untimely fate of my people? Tribe follows tribe, and nation follows nation, like the waves of the sea. It is the order of nature and regret is useless. Your time of decay may be distant — but it will surely come, for even the White Man whose God walked and talked with him as friend with friend cannot be exempt from the common destiny. We may be brothers after all. Let the White Man be just and deal kindly with my people, for the dead are not powerless. Dead — I say? There is no death. Only a change of worlds. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE 1. BELIEVE IT OR NOT! 1 2. THE ROMANCE OF THE WATERFRONT . 5 3. HOW OUR RAILROADS GREW 11 4. FROM HORSE CARS TO MOTOR BUSES . 16 5. HOW SEATTLE USED TO SEE—AND KEEP WARM 21 6. INDOOR ENTERTAINMENTS 26 7. PLAYING FOOTBALL IN PIONEER PLACE . 29 8. STRANGE "IFS" IN SEATTLE'S HISTORY . 34 9. HISTORICAL POINTS IN FIRST AVENUE . 41 10.
    [Show full text]
  • Salmon and Piper's Creek Watershed
    SALMON AND PIPER’S CREEK WATERSHED 2015 A Resource Guide for Carkeek Park Salmon Stewards CREDITS Information in this guide was compiled by Seattle Parks and Recreation Environmental Education and Outdoor Learning Staff and Intern. Last edited: December 2015 Photo by Catherine Anstett. Seattle Parks and Recreation Environmental Education & Outdoor Learning 3801 Discovery Park Blvd. Seattle, WA 98199 Reproduction of this book is for educational purposes only. Other reproduction is prohibited. TABLE OF CONTENTS Contents (click on title to go to page) Dear Salmon Stewards __________________________________________ 1 Program Goals ________________________________________________ 2 What is a watershed? ___________________________________________ 3 Piper’s Creek Watershed ________________________________________ 4 Carkeek Park & Piper’s Creek ______________________________________ 5 A Word on Chum & Piper’s Creek __________________________________ 8 Challenges of Managing an Urban Watershed ___________________________ 9 Why Salmon? _______________________________________________ 10 Culture __________________________________________________ 10 Ecology __________________________________________________ 12 Chum Life Cycle Timeline ______________________________________ 13 Economy _________________________________________________ 16 Threats to Salmon Survival ______________________________________ 17 What Can I Do to Help Salmon? _________________________________ 17 Program Logistics ____________________________________________ 20 Volunteer Roles
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 13 -- Puget Sound, Washington
    514 Puget Sound, Washington Volume 7 WK50/2011 123° 122°30' 18428 SKAGIT BAY STRAIT OF JUAN DE FUCA S A R A T O 18423 G A D A M DUNGENESS BAY I P 18464 R A A L S T S Y A G Port Townsend I E N L E T 18443 SEQUIM BAY 18473 DISCOVERY BAY 48° 48° 18471 D Everett N U O S 18444 N O I S S E S S O P 18458 18446 Y 18477 A 18447 B B L O A B K A Seattle W E D W A S H I N ELLIOTT BAY G 18445 T O L Bremerton Port Orchard N A N 18450 A 18452 C 47° 47° 30' 18449 30' D O O E A H S 18476 T P 18474 A S S A G E T E L N 18453 I E S C COMMENCEMENT BAY A A C R R I N L E Shelton T Tacoma 18457 Puyallup BUDD INLET Olympia 47° 18456 47° General Index of Chart Coverage in Chapter 13 (see catalog for complete coverage) 123° 122°30' WK50/2011 Chapter 13 Puget Sound, Washington 515 Puget Sound, Washington (1) This chapter describes Puget Sound and its nu- (6) Other services offered by the Marine Exchange in- merous inlets, bays, and passages, and the waters of clude a daily newsletter about future marine traffic in Hood Canal, Lake Union, and Lake Washington. Also the Puget Sound area, communication services, and a discussed are the ports of Seattle, Tacoma, Everett, and variety of coordinative and statistical information.
    [Show full text]
  • Preliminary Draft
    PRELIMINARY DRAFT Pacific Northwest Quarterly Index Volumes 1–98 N­R Compiled by Janette Rawlings A few notes on the use of this index The index was alphabetized using the word­by­word system. In this system, alphabetizing continues until the end of the first word. Subsequent words are considered only when other entries begin with the same word. The locators consist of the volume number, issue number, and page numbers. So, in the entry “Gamblepudding and Sons, 36(3):261–62,” 36 refers to the volume number, 3 to the issue number, and 261­62 to the page numbers. ii “‘Names Joined Together as Our Hearts Are’: The N Friendship of Samuel Hill and Reginald H. NAACP. See National Association for the Thomson,” by William H. Wilson, 94(4):183­ Advancement of Colored People 96 Naches and Columbia River Irrigation Canal, "The Naming of Seward in Alaska," 1(3):159–161 10(1):23–24 "The Naming of Elliott Bay: Shall We Honor the Naches Pass, Wash., 14(1):78–79 Chaplain or the Midshipman?," by Howard cattle trade, 38(3):194–195, 202, 207, 213 A. Hanson, 45(1):28–32 The Naches Pass Highway, To Be Built Over the "Naming Stampede Pass," by W. P. Bonney, Ancient Klickitat Trail the Naches Pass 12(4):272–278 Military Road of 1852, review, 36(4):363 Nammack, Georgiana C., Fraud, Politics, and the Nackman, Mark E., A Nation within a Nation: Dispossession of the Indians: The Iroquois The Rise of Texas Nationalism, review, Land Frontier in the Colonial Period, 69(2):88; rev.
    [Show full text]
  • Duwamish River and Elliott Bay
    KING COUNTY Combined Sewer Overflow Water Quality Assessment for the Duwamish River and Elliott Bay SUMMARY 1 The river was alive with salmon. They rolled and The Duwamish Estuary: Yesterday and Today products we use in our households and busi- splashed everywhere. I Why don’t we see a variety of fish and wildlife in nesses, and the crops we could hear them in the the Duwamish River and Elliott Bay in Seattle today? grow eventually find their The answer is complicated. Much is uncertain. But fog, and some I could way into our water bodies one thing we know for sure. Our activities have see, huge shadows that through sewers, leaky dramatically changed the water bodies in the area. septic tanks, and stormwater climbed the air and Over the past 100 years, we’ve changed the shape, runoff. slipped back into the the location, and the physical features of Elliott Bay The Duwamish River and water so close to the and the Duwamish River by filling in wetlands, Elliott Bay are considered an dredging the bottom of the water bodies for easier boat I could have estuary – a place where fresh- navigation, building houses and businesses along touched them. water and marine waters mingle. shorelines, and diverting or eliminating streams and Estuaries support an abundance Richard Hugo, rivers that flow into these waterbodies. And we’ve The Real West of life. Young salmon stay in the changed the quality of the water that remains in Marginal Way, 1986 Elliott Bay-Duwamish River these water bodies. Past industrial practices, which estuary for a while in order to eat are no longer in use, have left a legacy of pollution in and build up strength before moving into open the sediments.
    [Show full text]
  • Green Stormwater Infrastructure, Urban
    Green Stormwater Infrastructure Urban Forests and Integrated Water Systems For Forterra - Stewardship Department Jeff Dong and Joel Perkins University of Washington Professional Master’s Program in GIS Geography 569 GIS Workshop 23 Aug 2013 2 J. Dong, J. Perkins Project Sponsor Forterra Weston Brinkley Advisors Robert Aguirre, Ph.D. Timothy Nyerges, Ph.D. Mary Roderick, Ph.D. Candidate Suzanne Withers, Ph.D. J. Dong, J. Perkins 3 Table of Contents 1 – Introduction 1.1 – A Closer Look at Forest Canopy and Stormwater Runoff ....... 12 1.2 – Forterra and the Green Seattle Partnership ........................... 17 1.3 – Site Prioritization ..................................................................... 18 1.4 – Describing the System ............................................................ 21 1.5 – Assessing the System ............................................................. 22 1.6 – Transformability ...................................................................... 23 1.7 – Decision Situation Assessment ............................................... 24 2 – Design 2.1 – Conceptual Model Overview ................................................... 27 2.2 – Identifying Project Deliverables .............................................. 29 2.3 – Identify Feature Classes ......................................................... 29 2.4 – Determine Relationships Between Feature Classes .............. 30 2.5 – Concept Strategy .................................................................... 30 2.5.1 - Identify Problem Areas
    [Show full text]