The 42-mile-long White Oak River is one of the last relatively unblemished watery jewels of the N.C. coast. The predominantly black water river meanders through Jones, Carteret and Onslow counties along the central N.C. coast, gradually widening as it flows past Swansboro and into the Atlantic Ocean. It drains almost 12,000 acres of estuaries -- saltwater marshes lined with cordgrass, narrow and impenetrable hardwood swamps and rare stands of red cedar that are flooded with wind tides. The lower portion of the river was so renowned for fat oysters and clams that in times past competing watermen came to blows over its bounty at places that now bear names like Battleground Rock. The lower river is also a designated primary nursery area ...
Maine\u27s natural resources have always been important to its people. Timber, tourism, agriculture ...
Contains: Memorandum on the future of oyster planting in the upper Rappahannock Mortality of oyste...
This is a report of work done by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in accordance with an agre...
Congress established a legal imperative to restore the quality of our surface waters when it enacted...
Coastal North Carolina has about 2.3 million acres of marsh, wetlands, creeks, rivers, and sounds, m...
The Newport River Estuary (NPRE), an important North Carolina (NC) shellfish harvesting area, has be...
As with a majority of the remaining undeveloped coastal areas in North Carolina, Brunswick County is...
Ten years ago, bacteria levels in 99% of the Lynnhaven River exceeded the Department of Health’s lim...
Each year Granite State shellfishers search shallow briny waters in search of delicious mussels, cla...
Estuaries are valuable habitats (e.g. seagrass meadows, forested wetlands) and are also economically...
Nonpoint source (NPS) pollution is a pervasive problem throughout the United States. In coastal Nort...
Estuaries are valuable habitats (e.g. seagrass meadows, forested wetlands) and are also economically...
In the 1960\u27s shell fishing was abandoned in Dyes Inlet due to ongoing fecal pollution problems. ...
In North Carolina, more than 100,000 acres of shellfish waters have been closed to shellfishing, man...
Eastern North Carolina’s expansive aquatic environment, with large lagoonal sounds tapering into win...
Maine\u27s natural resources have always been important to its people. Timber, tourism, agriculture ...
Contains: Memorandum on the future of oyster planting in the upper Rappahannock Mortality of oyste...
This is a report of work done by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in accordance with an agre...
Congress established a legal imperative to restore the quality of our surface waters when it enacted...
Coastal North Carolina has about 2.3 million acres of marsh, wetlands, creeks, rivers, and sounds, m...
The Newport River Estuary (NPRE), an important North Carolina (NC) shellfish harvesting area, has be...
As with a majority of the remaining undeveloped coastal areas in North Carolina, Brunswick County is...
Ten years ago, bacteria levels in 99% of the Lynnhaven River exceeded the Department of Health’s lim...
Each year Granite State shellfishers search shallow briny waters in search of delicious mussels, cla...
Estuaries are valuable habitats (e.g. seagrass meadows, forested wetlands) and are also economically...
Nonpoint source (NPS) pollution is a pervasive problem throughout the United States. In coastal Nort...
Estuaries are valuable habitats (e.g. seagrass meadows, forested wetlands) and are also economically...
In the 1960\u27s shell fishing was abandoned in Dyes Inlet due to ongoing fecal pollution problems. ...
In North Carolina, more than 100,000 acres of shellfish waters have been closed to shellfishing, man...
Eastern North Carolina’s expansive aquatic environment, with large lagoonal sounds tapering into win...
Maine\u27s natural resources have always been important to its people. Timber, tourism, agriculture ...
Contains: Memorandum on the future of oyster planting in the upper Rappahannock Mortality of oyste...
This is a report of work done by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in accordance with an agre...