666 research outputs found

    R/V Bay Eagle Operations Manual

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    The RIV Bay Eagle was built at Crown Point, Louisiana, in 1980 as a crewboat designed to ferry personnel and supplies to oilfield platforms. This boat was converted to a research vessel by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) in 1987. It has performed scientific missions throughout the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries and along the continental shelf of the Mid-Atlantic Bight. This guide has been compiled to outline the procedures, capabilities and safety standards under which research is planned and carried out aboard the R/V Bay Eagle

    VIMS 75th Anniversary Alumni Research Symposium : October 8-9, 2015, Gloucester Point, Virginia

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    Program brochure and agenda for the symposium. Also available online are some of the presentations and posters from the conference

    Overview 1996-1998 Virginia Institute of Marine Science

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    https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsannualrpt/1033/thumbnail.jp

    Virginia Institute of Marine Science Thirty-Third, Thirty-Fourth, and Thirty-Fifth Annual Reports (1974-1976)

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    For the periods ending June 30,1976.https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsannualrpt/1015/thumbnail.jp

    Habitat development field investigations, Windmill Point marsh development site, James River, Virginia; Appendix D: Environmental impacts of marsh development with dredged material: Botany, soils, aquatic biology, and wildlife

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    The Windmill Point marsh development site is a 9.3-ha dredged material island located in the James River, 0.4 km west of Windmill Point, Prince George County, Virginia. The marsh site construction began in November 1974 and continued in conjunction with r9utine maintenance dredging through February 1975. The island, at the completion of construction, consisted of a sand dike forming a rectangular perimenter 152 x 396 m, occupying 1.2 ha above mean high water, confining an area about 5.7 ha of which 4.9 ha was intertidal substrate composed of dike and dredged material

    Operation manual for the VIMS combined Hydrodynamic-Ecosystem Model (HEM)

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    Since about 1970, VIMS has been developing water quality simulation models for the Virginia State Water Control Board under the Cooperative State Agencies (CSA) agreement. Under this agreement, VIMS has conducted field programs and developed and validated a number of water quality models. In order to make this accumulated experience available to the State Water Control Board and others, VIMS has prepared a users\u27 manual and sample cases for the combined hydrodynamic-ecosystem model (HEM)

    2021 Annual Awards

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    The Annual Awards ceremony is an occasion in which new employees and volunteers are introduced, employee service is recognized and student and faculty awards are presented
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