The Bowling Farm Site (001CSR), a multi-component site comprising Native American and European artifact assemblages, a wharf structure, and a shipwreck, represents a unique clue to early North Carolina history. Located on the Cashie River in Bertie County, this site may be seminal to the history of colonial North Carolina settlement and economy, since little is known about colonial settlement in this area. The primary focus of this thesis is to explore the possibility of a potential correlation between the site's economic history, wharf construction, and the artifact assemblage by comparing Bowling Farm Site to five other plantation wharf sites located in Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. This thesis also aims to promo...
During the Late Devonian time period, sediments eroded from the Acadian mountains were transported w...
Important processes governing the fate and transport of light petroleum hydrocarbons in the Lower Mi...
Uniola paniculata, commonly known as sea oats, is a C4 perennial grass capable of stabilizing sand d...
This thesis examines the relationship between material culture and the formation of cultural identit...
As coastal environments become more susceptible to land loss through accelerating sea level rise and...
Rising sea levels not only threaten coastal infrastructure and private property, but also the worldâ...
Foreland basin sediment deposition in North-Central Pennsylvania during Late Devonian time records e...
Observations of sediment transport pathways and bathymetric change are often difficult to obtain ove...
This study focused on valley fills in the upper Driftwood Creek basin, a 3rd order drainage network ...
This dissertation attempts to better understand astronomical, meteorological, and oceanographic forc...
During the summer of 2016, students led by Dr. Charles Ewen excavated the proposed Edward Moseley Ru...
This thesis is an investigation of the Fred Graves Site, an abandoned nineteenth century farmstead i...
In 1961 Hutchinson proposed the “Paradox of the Plankton” questioning how sympatric planktonic speci...
Seaweed aquaculture has been a successful supplemental livelihood in coastal communities worldwide, ...
Tick-borne disease transmission has been steadily increasing in the United States. This is a major c...
During the Late Devonian time period, sediments eroded from the Acadian mountains were transported w...
Important processes governing the fate and transport of light petroleum hydrocarbons in the Lower Mi...
Uniola paniculata, commonly known as sea oats, is a C4 perennial grass capable of stabilizing sand d...
This thesis examines the relationship between material culture and the formation of cultural identit...
As coastal environments become more susceptible to land loss through accelerating sea level rise and...
Rising sea levels not only threaten coastal infrastructure and private property, but also the worldâ...
Foreland basin sediment deposition in North-Central Pennsylvania during Late Devonian time records e...
Observations of sediment transport pathways and bathymetric change are often difficult to obtain ove...
This study focused on valley fills in the upper Driftwood Creek basin, a 3rd order drainage network ...
This dissertation attempts to better understand astronomical, meteorological, and oceanographic forc...
During the summer of 2016, students led by Dr. Charles Ewen excavated the proposed Edward Moseley Ru...
This thesis is an investigation of the Fred Graves Site, an abandoned nineteenth century farmstead i...
In 1961 Hutchinson proposed the “Paradox of the Plankton” questioning how sympatric planktonic speci...
Seaweed aquaculture has been a successful supplemental livelihood in coastal communities worldwide, ...
Tick-borne disease transmission has been steadily increasing in the United States. This is a major c...
During the Late Devonian time period, sediments eroded from the Acadian mountains were transported w...
Important processes governing the fate and transport of light petroleum hydrocarbons in the Lower Mi...
Uniola paniculata, commonly known as sea oats, is a C4 perennial grass capable of stabilizing sand d...