White Shark Status Review References

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

White Shark Status Review References White Shark Status Review References Adams PB, Grimes CB, Hightower JE, Lindley ST, Moser ML, Parsley MJ. 2007. Population status of North American green sturgeon, Acipenser medirostris. Environmental Biology of Fishes. 79:339-356. Ainley DG, Henderson RP, Huber HR, Boekelheide RJ, Allen SG, McElroy TL. 1985. Dynamics of White Shark/Pinniped Interactions in the Gulf of the Farallones Sibley G, Seigel JA, Swift CC, editors. Biology of the White Shark, a Symposium. 9:109–122. Anderson SD, Chapple TK, Jorgensen SJ, Klimley AP, Block BA. 2011. Long-term individual identification and site fidelity of white sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, off California using dorsal fins. Marine Biology. 158:1233–1237. Anderson SD, Pyle P. A. 2003. Temporal, Sex-Specific Occurrence Pattern Among White Sharks At the South Farallon Islands, California. California Fish and Game. 89(2):96–101. Barreira A. 2007. The protection of sharks: A legal and policy analysis. Prepared for Oceana by Instituto Internacional de Derecho y Medio Ambiente. 1–69.Ŧ Bartholomew GA, Boolootian RA. 1960. Numbers and Population Structure of the Pinnipeds on the California Channel Islands. Journal of Mammalogy. 41(3):366– 375. Bograd SJ, Castro CG, Di Lorenzo E, Palacios DM, Bailey H, Gilly W, Chavez FP. 2008. Oxygen declines and the shoaling of the hypoxic boundary in the California Current. Geophysical Research Letters. 35(L12607):1–6. Bonfil R. 1994. Overview of world elasmobranch fisheries. FAO Fisheries Technical Paper. No. 341. Boustany AM, Davis SF, Pyle P, Anderson SD, Le Boeuf BJ, Block BA. 2002. Expanded niche for white sharks. Nature. 415:35–36. Bruce BD, Bradford RW. 2012. Habitat Use and Spatial Dynamics of Juvenile White Sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, in Eastern Australia. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the Biology and life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; pp. 225–255. Bruce BD, Stevens JD, Malcolm H. 2006. Movements and swimming behavior of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) in Australian waters. Marine Biology. 150:161– 172. Brunnschweiler JM, Nielsen F, Motta P. 2011. In situ observation of stomach eversion in a line-caught Shortfin Mako (Isurus oxyrinchus). Fisheries Research. 109:212– 216. Cailliet GM, Natanson LJ, Welden B, Ebert D. 1985. Preliminary Studies on the Age and Growth of the White Shark, Carcharodon carcharias, Using Vertebral Bands Sibley G, Seigel JA, Swift CC, editors. Biology of the White Shark, a Symposium. 9:49–60. Carlisle AB, Kim SL, Semmens BX, Madigan DH, Jorgensen SJ, Perle CR, Anderson SD, Chapple TK, Kanive PE, Block BA. 2012. Using Stable Isotope Analysis to Understand the Migration and Trophic Ecology of Northeastern Pacific White Sharks (Carcharodon carcharias). PLoS ONE. 7(2):1–15. Carretta JV, Forney KA, Oleson E, Martien K, Muto MM, Lowry MS, Barlow J, Baker J, Hanson B, Lynch D, Carswell L, Brownell Jr. RL, Robbins J, Mattila DK, Ralls K, Hill MC. 2011. U.S. Pacific Marine Mammal Stock Assessments. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; p. 360. Cartamil D, Santana-Morales O, Escobedo-Olvera MA, Kacev D, Castillo-Geniz L, Graham JB, Rubin RD, Sosa-Nishizaki O. 2011. The artisanal elasmobranch fishery of the Pacific coast of Baja California, Mexico. Fisheries Research. 108:393–403. Cass VL. 1985. Exploitation of California Sea Lions, Zalophus californianus, Prior to 1972. Marine Fisheries Review. 47(1):36–38. Castro JI. 2012. A Summary of Observations on the Maximum Size Attained by the White Shark, Carcharodon carcharias. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 85–90. CDFW. 2013. White Seabass Fishery Management Plan 2011-2012 Annual Review. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Region Report to the Fish and Game Commission. 13 pages. Available from: https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=75303&inline=true Chapple TK, Jorgensen SJ, Anderson SD, Kanive PE, Klimely AP, Botsford LW, Block BA. 2011. A first estimate of white shark, Carcharodon carcharias, abundance off Central California. Biology Letters [Internet]. Available from: rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org CITES. 2004. CoP13 Prop. 32: Inclusion of Carcharodon carcharias in Appendix II with a zero annual export quota. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, Thirteenth Meeting of the Conference of the Parties. Compagno LJV. 2001. Family Lamnidae. In: Compagno LJV, editor. Sharks of the world: An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Volume 2. Bullhead, mackerel, and carpet sharks (Heterodontformes, Lamniformes, and Orectolobiformes). Vol. 2. FAO Species Catalouge for Fishery Purposes; pp. 96–107. Compagno LJV, Marks MA, Fergusson IK. 1997. Threatened fishes of the world: Carcharodon carcharias (Linnaeus, 1758) (Lamnidae). Environmental Biology of Fishes. 50:61–62. Cope JM, Piner KP, Minte-Vera CV, Punt AE. 2004. Status and future prospects for cabezon (Scorpaenichthys marmoratus) as assessed in 2003. Pacific Fishery Management Council, Portland, OR. COSEWIC. 2006. COSEWIC Assessment and Status Report on the White Shark Carcharodon carcharias (Atlantic and Pacific populations) in Canada. Ottawa: Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada; p. 38. Curtis TH, Bruce BD, Cliff G, Dudley SFJ, Klimley AP, Kock AA, Lea RN, Lowe CG, McCosker JE, Skomal GB. 2006. Responding to the Risk of White Shark Attack Updated Statistics, Prevention, Control Methods, and Recommendations. In: Global Perspectives on the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. ; pp. 477–510. Dewar, H., T. Eguchi, J. Hyde, D. Kinzey, S. Kohin, J. Moore, B. L. Taylor, and R. Vetter. 2013. Status review of the northeastern Pacific population of white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) under the Endangered Species Act. Prepared by the NMFS Southwest Fisheries Science Center. La Jolla, CA. Dicken ML. 2008. First observations of young of the year and juvenile great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) scavenging from a whale carcass. Marine and Freshwater Research. 59:596–602. DOF. 2002. Normal Oficial Mexicana NOM-059-ECOL-2001, Protección ambiental– Especies nativas de México de flora y fauna silvestres–Categorías de riesgo y especificaciones para su inclusión, exclusión ocambio–Lista de especies en riesgo. SEMARNAT, Diario Oficial de la Federación, 6 de marzo de 2002, segunda sección. DOF. 2007. Normal Oficial Mexicana NOM-029-PESC-2006, Pesca responsable de tiburones y rayas: Especificaciones para su aprovechamiento. SAGARPA. Diario Oficial de la Federación, 14 de febrero de 2007, primera sección. DOF. 2014. ACUERDO por el que se establece veda permanente para la pesca de tiburón blanco (Carcharodon carcharias) en aguas de jurisdicción federal de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos. SAGARPA. Diario Oficial de la Federación, 27 de enero 2014, primera sección. Domeier ML. 2012a. A New Life-History Hypothesis for White Sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, in the Northeastern Pacific. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; pp. 199–224. Domeier ML. 2012b. How Many White Sharks are Swimming in the Northeast Pacific? Marine CSI [Internet]. Available from: http://www.marinecsi.org/news-events/ Ŧ Domeier ML, Nasby-Lucas N. 2008. Migration patterns of white sharks Carcharodon carcharias tagged at Guadalupe Island, Mexico, and identification of an eastern pacific shared offshore foraging area. Marine Ecology Progressive Series. 370:221–237. Domeier ML, Nasby-Lucas N. 2012. Sex-Specific Migration Patterns and Sexual Segregation of Adult White Sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, in the Northeastern Pacific. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 133–146. Domeier ML, Nasby-Lucas N. 2013. Two-year migration of adult female white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) reveals widely separated nursery areas and conservation concerns. Animal Biotelemetry. 1(2):1–10. Domeier ML, Nasby-Lucas N. 2007. Annual re-sightings of photographically identified white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) at an eastern Pacific aggregation site (Guadalupe Island, Mexico). Marine Biology. 150:977–984. Domeier ML, Nasby-Lucas N, Palacios DM. 2012. The Northeastern Pacific White Shark Shared Offshore Foraging Area (SOFA). A First Examination and Description from Ship Observations and Remote Sensing. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 158–174. Drake N. 2013. California Shipping Lanes Moved in Attempt to Avoid Killing Whales. Wired Science [Internet]. [cited 2013 Dec 20]. Available from: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/05/whales-and-shipstrikes/ Ŧ Ebert, D.A. 2003. Sharks, Rays, and Chimaeras of California. University of California Press, 284 pages. Berkeley, California. Environment Canada. 2011. Species At Risk Act Annual Report for 2011. 52 p. Available at: http://www.sararegistry.gc.ca/virtual_sara/files/ r. Feely RA, Sabine CL, Hernandez-Ayon JM, Ianson D, Hales B. 2008. Evidence for Upwelling of Corrosive “Acidified” Water on the Continental Shelf. Science. 320:1490–1492. Francis MP. 1996. Observations on a Pregnant White Shark with a Review of Reproductive Biology. In: Klimely AP, Ainley DG, editors. Great White Sharks: The Biology of Carcharodon carcharias. San Diego, CA: Academic Press; pp. 157–172. Galvan-Magana F, Hoyos-Padilla EM, Navarro-Sement CJ, Marquez-Farias F. 2010. Records of white shark, Carcharodon carcharias, in the Gulf of California, Mexico. Marine Biodiversity Records. 3:1–6. Gruber N, Hauri C, Lachkar Z, Loher D, Frolicher TL, Plattner G-K. 2012. Rapid Progression of Ocean Acidification in the California Current System. Science. 337:220–222. Gubili C, Duffy CAJ, Cliff G, Wintner SP, Shivji MS, Chapman DD, Bruce BD, Martin AP, Sims DW. 2012. Application of Molecular Genetics for Conservation of the White Shark, Carcharodon carcharias, L. 1758. In: Domeier ML, editor. Global Perspectives on the Biology and Life History of the White Shark. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; pp. 357–380. Hamady, LL, Natanson LJ, Skomal GB, Thorrold SR. 2014.
Recommended publications
  • Our Australia
    O u r A u s t r A l i A One Place, Many Stories: Oceans This publication draws on information from the Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities’ website. For more information, visit www.environment.gov.au Front cover: Humpback whales in Pacific Ocean Photo credit: Richard Freeman, http://aloneatseaphotography.com.au © Commonwealth of Australia 2011 ISBN 978-1-921733-39-0 This work is protected by copyright law. Apart from any use permitted by the Copyright Act 1968 (including research or study) no part may be produced by any process, reused or redistributed for any commercial purpose or distributed to a third party for such purpose, without prior written permission from the Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities. Design: www.2b.com.au All data included in this document are presumed to be correct as received from data providers. No responsibility is taken by the Commonwealth for errors or omissions, and the Commonwealth does not accept responsibility in respect to any information or advice given in relation to, or as a consequence of anything contained therein. O u r A u s t r A l i A One Place, Many Stories: Oceans minister’s foreword Australia is surrounded by They support coastal communities and their magnificent oceans that are marine industries. But while we are reliant on the envy of the world. our oceans’ richness economically and socially, But we cannot afford to we also need to conserve and protect this resource be complacent. for current and future generations. We need to ensure we use our marine resources sustainably.
    [Show full text]
  • Our World-Underwater Scholarship Society ®
    our world-underwater scholarship society ® 47th Annual Awards Program – June 3 - 5, 2021 Welcome to the 47th anniversary celebration of the Our World-Underwater Scholarship Society®. It has always been a great pleasure for me as president of the Society to bring the “family” together each year in New York City, so of course it is with great disappointment that for the second year we are unable to do so. A year ago, as the pandemic was beginning to spread throughout the world, the board of directors made the difficult decision to put all scholarship and internship activities on hold. 2020 was the first time in the Society’s history that we did not put Scholars or Interns in the field. But there is good news – the Society has new energy and is working with our hosts and sponsors to safely get our incoming 2021 Scholars and Interns started on their journeys. We bring three new Rolex Scholars and five new interns into our family for a total of 103 Rolex Scholars and 107 interns since the inception of the Society, and all of this has been accomplished by our all-volunteer organization. Forty-seven years of volunteers have been selfless in their efforts serving as directors, officers, committee members, coordinators, and technical advisors all motivated to support the Society’s mission “to promote educational activities associated with the underwater world.” None of this would have been possible without the incredible support by the Society’s many organizational partners and corporate sponsors throughout the years. The one constant in the Society’s evolution has been Rolex which continues to support the Society as part of its Perpetual Planet Initiative.
    [Show full text]
  • Rodney Fox Rodney
    This week’s serving won’t mean much to our readers who live inland from the ocean, for instance, Zimbabwe (where several hundred of our e-friends live) is entirely land-locked – far from the ocean. We can read about something, maybe even watch a TV report on it, but it’s just not the same as being there! But for anyone who has lived near the ocean and had an encounter of the kind this Friday Food 'n' Therapy focuses on….. there is a primal fear that rises up that words can’t describe. In coastal Australia there is an expression that says it all…. GREAT WHITE….. This is not referring to an overweight murungu (white man)! But to the white pointer shark – the most efficient killing machine known on earth. Yes, the film JAWS exaggerated their size (they have been caught “only” up to 7 metres long), but the reality of what the more common 5m long specimens can do is legendary in our part of the world. Most Saturday mornings, I jog (while Elizabeth walks with our dog) with our running club alongside Georges River, some 30km from the ocean. There are signs nearby warning bathers about sharks. In 1936 a 5m shark lost its way up the river, and hungry, it killed and ate two people in two weeks. About five years ago, I swam across the same river nearby (where it’s only about 300m across); on the other side a man warned me that a dog was taken by a shark only the week before….
    [Show full text]
  • MONDAY Good Morning Year 5! Welcome to Week 4 of Home Learning
    MONDAY Good Morning Year 5! Welcome to Week 4 of Home Learning. You have set work for each day. Make sure you complete your daily check in on Google Classroom - and say hi to your teachers and classmates. Your classroom is a great place to ask questions about today’s work. If you need a brain break - take it! Try not to complete your work all in one go. Don’t forget you can access Lexia, Epic, Typing Club and Prodigy if you finish your work early. How will you enjoy nature today? Creatng sentences with conjunctons Complete the sentence stems using each conjuncton in turn. Because—explains why something is true. But—indicates a change in directon—like a ‘U-turn’. So—tells us what happens as a result of something else—a cause and its efect , in other words. The frst one has been done for you. 1. The teacher was happy because we raised our hands. The teacher was happy but he stll gave us homework. The teacher was happy so she took us out for extra sport. 2. Sara thought the movie was boring because ______________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Sara thought the movie was boring but _____________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ Sara thought the movie was boring so ______________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ 3. Scot Morrison is a great Prime Minister because _________________________ __________________________________________________________________________
    [Show full text]
  • SOUTH AUSTRALIAN DIVING FATALITIES 1950–1985 (This Edition with Preliminary Reports of 1986-2004 Recent Cases) ______
    _________________________ SOUTH AUSTRALIAN DIVING FATALITIES 1950–1985 (this edition with preliminary reports of 1986-2004 recent cases) _________________________ Originally Published July 1987 in ADELAIDE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA, with the financial assistance of the COPYRIGHT © 2004 PETER HORNE (Original: ISBN 0 9594383 3 5) PREFACE When this book was first researched and published in the mid- 1980s, the South Australian Coroner (Mr Barry Ahern) and his clerical support officers under the Attorney General’s Office were extremely helpful and very supportive of my interest in this subject, often going out of their ways to provide access to files and copying facilities so that this study could be completed and the book published at minimal cost to enable the wider public to have cheaper, easy access to the material. Some 15 years later, in the first years of the 21st Century, I considered updating this work into a 50-year study so that more recent cases could be included to help identify trends in our local diving accidents. However, inevitable changes to procedures, personnel and rising copying costs sadly meant that such in-depth analysis of more recent cases would have to wait until a later date. Nevertheless, because accidents still continued to occur (including more at Port Noarlunga, an unusual number of shark attacks and a spate of commercial diving accidents), I was spurred to reprint the book so I could at least include a preliminary listing of these more recent cases. One of the key findings of my original study was that in the case of most ocean-diving accidents, it was mainly the lack of an efficient buoyancy system which significantly contributed towards the victims’ deaths, so I have been somewhat encouraged to learn that the more recent cases were not caused by the divers’ failure to have an efficient buoyancy system on hand.
    [Show full text]
  • Great White Shark Movie 1969
    1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1969 1970 1971 October 2 at 10:31 a.m. 1972 1973 1974 1975 STAN WATERMAN and the first 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 GREAT WHITE 1981 1982 1983 1984 SHARK MOVIE 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Photo: Ron and Valerie Taylor 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 162 STAN WATERMAN DIVE ADVENTURES 163 and the first great white shark movie STAN WATERMAN AND THE FIRST GREAT WHITE SHARK MOVIE Stan Waterman is one of the best-known divers in the world. He was one of the first in everything: dive operation owner, liveaboard captain and the first diver who filmed a documentary on great white sharks in the open ocean, making him the first to dive with “Jaws” outside the cage. “We descended in two cages tethered to the giant whale the water and chunks of blubber and bone hung in the water carcass… miles offshore in bottomless depths. We viewed a column. Then Gimbel made a spontaneous decision to break scene that was stunning… overwhelming to our senses. every rule imaginable at the time. Stan Waterman recounts, Hundreds, maybe a thousand, oceanic white tip sharks and “When Peter opened the cage door and exited into the feed- other dangerous species filled our masks in every direc- ing sharks, I felt I had to back him up. It was like stepping off 1969 tion.” Waterman is still thrilled, explaining the first shark the edge of a precipice.
    [Show full text]
  • Albuquerque's International District Green Building
    N EWS & V IEWS FRO M THE S USTAI N AB L E S OUTHWEST STORIES OF ROUTE 66 ALBUQUERQUE’S INTERNATIONAL DISTRICT GREEN BUIldING: LEADERSHIP BY EXAMPLE July 2014 NORTHERN NEW MEXICO’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER Vol. 6 No. 7 2 Green Fire Times • July 2014 www.GreenFireTimes.com www.GreenFireTimes.com Green Fire Times • July 2014 3 Do Your Part! • Ride the RTD! Last year* more than 2,161 tons (4,322,000 lbs.) of carbon emissions were reduced by people riding the RTD. 4.35 million vehicle miles were removed from our streets resulting in fewer cars and less wear and tear on our roads. Support a greener New Mexico! PubLic TRaNSiT iS SuSTaiNabiLiTY! Free service Monday through Friday in the counties of Santa Fe, Taos, Los alamos and Rio arriba. For information visit www.RideThebluebus.com or call toll free 1-866-206-0754 *FY2013 July 2012 – June 2013 4 Green Fire Times • July 2014 www.GreenFireTimes.com Vol. 6, No. 7 • July 2014 Issue No. 63 PUBLISHER Green Fire Publishing, LLC Skip Whitson NEWS & VIEWS FROM THE SUSTAINABLE SOUTHWEST ASSoCIAte Publisher Winner of the Sustainable Santa Fe Award for Outstanding Educational Project barbara e. brown edItor-IN-ChIeF CONTENTS Seth roffman STORIES OF ROUTE 66: ALBUQUERQUE’S INTERNATIONAL DISTRICT .. .. .. .. .. .. ..7 Art dIreCtor A CREATIVE PLACEMAKING AND COMMUNITY REVITALIZATION PROJECT Anna C. hansen, dakini design ART & COMMUNITY CHANGE .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..8 CoPy edItorS Stephen Klinger ARTIST TEAM AND COMMUNITY PARTICIpaNTS .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..9 Susan Clair ID LIVE! EVENT SCHEDULE . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..9 WebmASter: Karen Shepherd HISTORY OF ALBUQUERQUE’S INTERNATIONAL DISTRICT .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11 CoNtrIbutING WrIterS THE INTERNATIONAL DISTRICT: A PORTRAIT .
    [Show full text]
  • Great Whites
    ON PAGES 122 & 123 OF THEIR EXCELLENT BOOK ON THE GREAT WHITE SHARK CARCHARODON CARCHARIAS, RICHARD ELLIS AND JOHN McCOSKER PROVIDE A WORLD MAP SHOWING ITS KNOWN DISTRIBUTION. ACCORDING TO THIS MAP, OVER TWO THIRDS OF AUSTRALIA’S COASTLINE IS HOME TO THIS SHARK, YET THERE’S ONE AREA THAT’S REPEATEDLY REFERRED TO IN THE BOOK AS THE EPICENTRE - PORT LINCOLN IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA’S SPENCER GULF. hooked on In June 2003 I travelled back to Port in the presence of the Great White - and Lincoln, seven years after my first visit, to that’s just what they do, grace you with try and realise a long held ambition to dive their presence - but let me simply state with the Great White shark. The Spencer that to see these sharks in the cold waters Gulf is one of only three places in the world of the Spencer Gulf is to see a creature in where it is possible do this with any degree total command of its environment. of certainty, the other two being the Farallon Islands in Southern California The whole experience is really quite and Dyer Island in South Africa. unique and one that has left an indelible impression on me. First of all I had always To be in the water, albeit from the safety of been under the impression that the Great a shark cage, with what is almost certainly White is just a totally ruthless killing the ultimate underwater predator is machine and it only required a few drops something I have wanted to do since I first of blood in the water for it to home in read about the incredible exploits of Ron from miles away and devour anything that & Valerie Taylor and Rodney Fox many was in the water.
    [Show full text]
  • Francine Battaglia
    LAST UPDATE: FEBRUARY 28, 2020 FRANCINE BATTAGLIA Professor, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Department Director, Computational Research for Energy Systems and Transport (CREST) Laboratory 339 Jarvis Hall, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York 14260 (716) 645-1470 [email protected] engineering.buffalo.edu/mechanical-aerospace/people/faculty/f-battaglia.html EDUCATION Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, May 1997 M.S., Aerospace Engineering, State University of New York at Buffalo, September 1992 B.S., Mechanical Engineering, State University of New York at Buffalo, June 1991 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY Acting Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs, SEAS, July 2019-present Professor, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, August 2017-present Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA Research Assignment (analogous to sabbatical), August 2015-December 2015 Professor, Mechanical Engineering, June 2012-July 2017 Associate Professor, Mechanical Engineering, August 2007-May 2012 Iowa State University, Ames, IA Associate Professor, Mechanical Engineering, May 2005-July 2007 Assistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering, August 1999-April 2005 Center for Building Energy Research, Iowa State University, Ames, IA Director, December 2004-July 2007 Associate Director, May 2004-November 2004 National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD Mechanical Engineer, NRC Postdoctoral Fellow, September 1997-July 1999 University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia Visiting Scholar, October 1995-November
    [Show full text]
  • September 2020 Newsletter
    SDFSA Newsletter – September 2020 SCUBA DIVERS FEDERATION OF SA, Inc. Email: [email protected] Web: https://sdfsa.net Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scubadivesa/ Join us for free! https://sdfsa.net/membership-categories/ Announcing SDFSA’s New Group on Facebook! In this month’s issue OUR LEAD STORY: A place to share SA dive site viz and conditions ...................................................... 2 IMPORTANT NOTICES ............................................................................................................................ 2 SDFSA COMMITTEE BUSINESS ............................................................................................................... 3 CONGRATULATIONS TO: ........................................................................................................................ 3 2020 - 2021 EVENTS ............................................................................................................................... 4 STEVE’S HISTORY and ARCHEOLOGY STORY .......................................................................................... 5 STEVE’S SCIENCE STORY for the month ................................................................................................. 5 ABOUT THE SDFSA… .............................................................................................................................. 6 1 OUR LEAD STORY: A place to share SA dive site viz and conditions https://www.facebook.com/groups/568109670769809 We all know that diving in South Australia is world
    [Show full text]
  • Fluidization XIV from Fundamentals to Products
    Program Fluidization XIV From Fundamentals to Products May 26-31, 2013 NH Conference Center Leeuwenhorst Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands Conference Co-Chairs J.A.M. Kuipers J.R. van Ommen Eindhoven University of Technology Delft University of Technology R.F. Mudde N.G. Deen Delft University of Technology Eindhoven University of Technology Engineering Conferences International 32 Broadway, Suite 314 New York, NY 10004, USA Phone: 1 - 212 - 514 - 6760, Fax: 1 - 212 - 514 - 6030 www.engconfintl.org – [email protected] NH Conference Centre Leeuwenhorst Langelaan, 3. 2211 XT Noordwijkerhout The Netherlands Tel.: +31.25.2378888 [email protected] Engineering Conferences International (ECI) is a not-for-profit global engineering conferences program, originally established in 1962, that provides opportunities for the exploration of problems and issues of concern to engineers and scientists from many disciplines. ECI BOARD MEMBERS Barry C. Buckland, President Peter Gray Michael King Raymond McCabe David Robinson William Sachs Eugene Schaefer P. Somasundaran Deborah Wiley Chair of ECI Conferences Committee: William Sachs ECI Technical Liaison for this conference: Ray Cocco ECI Executive Director: Barbara K. Hickernell ECI Associate Director: Kevin M. Korpics ©Engineering Conferences International Platinum sponsor Conference Co-chairs: Hans Kuipers, Multiphase Reactors Group Dept. Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology Robert Mudde, Multiscale Physics Group Faculty of Applied Sciences, Delft University
    [Show full text]
  • The Mississippi River Find
    First Quarter 2015 • Volume 23 • Number 82 • 23 Quarter 2015 • Volume First Diving History The Journal of The Mississippi River Find Find River Mississippi The The Journal of Diving History First Quarter 2015, Volume 23, Number 82 THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER FIND This issue is dedicated to the memory of HDS Advisory Board member Lotte Hass 1928 - 2015 HISTORICAL DIVING SOCIETY USA A PUBLIC BENEFIT NONPROFIT CORPORATION PO BOX 2837, SANTA MARIA, CA 93457 USA TEL. 805-934-1660 FAX 805-934-3855 e-mail: [email protected] or on the web at www.hds.org PATRONS OF THE SOCIETY HDS USA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Ernie Brooks II Carl Roessler Dan Orr, Chairman James Forte, Director Leslie Leaney Lee Selisky Sid Macken, President Janice Raber, Director Bev Morgan Greg Platt, Treasurer Ryan Spence, Director Steve Struble, Secretary Ed Uditis, Director ADVISORY BOARD Dan Vasey, Director Bob Barth Jack Lavanchy Dr. George Bass Clement Lee Tim Beaver Dick Long WE ACKNOWLEDGE THE CONTINUED Dr. Peter B. Bennett Krov Menuhin SUPPORT OF THE FOLLOWING: Dick Bonin Daniel Mercier FOUNDING CORPORATIONS Ernest H. Brooks II Joseph MacInnis, M.D. Texas, Inc. Jim Caldwell J. Thomas Millington, M.D. Best Publishing Mid Atlantic Dive & Swim Svcs James Cameron Bev Morgan DESCO Midwest Scuba Jean-Michel Cousteau Phil Newsum Kirby Morgan Diving Systems NJScuba.net David Doubilet Phil Nuytten Dr. Sylvia Earle Torrance Parker Marine Surplus Supply, UK North Coast Divers, Inc. Rodney Fox Zale Parry Oceaneering Int’l, West Coast Pacific Comm. Diving Supply Lad Handelman Carl Roessler Santa Barbara City College R & D Technology Services Bob Hollis Dr.
    [Show full text]