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Date: | Fri, 15 Mar 1996 16:52:36 EST |
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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Reply by : Gregory F. Durocher@Alaska@RMMC
Date : Friday, March 15, 1996 10:47:21
Reply to : iSMTP@RMMC1@Servers[<[log in to unmask]>]
Reply:
Well, evidentlty GEOREF didn't do all of its homework. There is an "Atlas of
the U.S. Exclsive Economic Zone, Bering Sea" I-2053 available through the USGS
Earth Science Information Centers. Cost is $4.00 for each atlas, with a $3.50
handling charge added at the end of the order. Send orders to:
USGS Information Services
Box 25286
Denver, CO 80225
Greg Durocher
USGS-ESIC/Alaska
907-786-7009
-------------------------- [Original Message] -------------------------
To : "Multiple recipients of list MAPS-L" <[log in to unmask]>
From : [log in to unmask]
Subject : ATLAS OF EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE...
Date : Wednesday, March 13, 1996 at 7:52:29 pm MST
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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Can anyone within USGS answer this? What is the status of
additional works to be published in the USGS Misc. Invest.
series on the theme of EEZ off Alaska and Hawaii?
Back in the glory days of the eighties, the USGS published
some 3 atlases on the Exclusive Economic Zones for the
Atlantic Continental Margin (I 2054), the Gulf of Mexico
(I 1864a,b), and the western conterminous United States
(I 1792). The latter item, published in 1986, carried an
introductory remark by Dallas Peck which said "Over the next
five years EEZ-SCAN will be extended to the EEZ of Alaska
and Hawaii." Well... that of course was ten years ago. I
searched GEOREF and didn't come up with anything.
If you're into marine geophysics, these works may interest
you. This is data from the GLORIA (Geological Long Range
Inclined Asdic) otherwise known as a side-scan sonar system
and produced by the IOC and EEZ SCAN scientific staff. The
format found within these USGS atlases are much easier to
use than, say, going after raw data extrapolated from some
Geophysics institute.
- PML
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