Should the Federal Government Manager our Recreational Saltwater Fisheries?
Comments
By wyane @ 05:03 AM - Friday, March 26, 2010
I remember my first trips to Flamingo in the Everglades National Park. It was like a trip to another country - so many miles across the vastness of the everglades to a small fishing village on the tip of Florida. Some of the guides who fished out of Flamingo in the '50s and '60s were legendary, at least they were in our part of the country.
One in particular was an old man whose name happened to be Walter Mann. I think I remember him spelling it with two n's. Walter was a crusty old fisherman whose reputation for catching fish was unparalleled. It seems that he always knew where the fish would be and what they would be doing beds.
I never got to fish with Captain Mann, but I knew several people who did, and they raved about his expertise bedspreads.
By tommy96 @ 05:08 AM - Friday, August 27, 2010
The topic of environmental modelling was last addressed in Issue 34 of ERCIM News, in July 1998. Influenced by the Kyoto Protocol (adopted on 11 December 1997), public awareness of environmental problems had at that time reached a peak. The goal of this thematic issue is to look at the pervasion of modern information and communication technology into the environmental and ecological sciences.
The power of today's computational and communication resources means that we are able to create modelling, simulation and decision-support tools with unprecedented quality. Modelling the biosphere with ever-greater numbers of biotic and abiotic components remains a great challenge of our time. Climate research (space weather included) uses models dealing with varying scales and resolutions, and will require new architectures with access to distributed resources. Branch-oriented simulation systems should prove the right software tools to be flexibly adapted to the special structure and data of complex environmental systems.
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Comments
By wyane @ 05:03 AM - Friday, March 26, 2010
I remember my first trips to Flamingo in the Everglades National Park. It was like a trip to another country - so many miles across the vastness of the everglades to a small fishing village on the tip of Florida. Some of the guides who fished out of Flamingo in the '50s and '60s were legendary, at least they were in our part of the country.
One in particular was an old man whose name happened to be Walter Mann. I think I remember him spelling it with two n's. Walter was a crusty old fisherman whose reputation for catching fish was unparalleled. It seems that he always knew where the fish would be and what they would be doing beds.
I never got to fish with Captain Mann, but I knew several people who did, and they raved about his expertise bedspreads.
By tommy96 @ 05:08 AM - Friday, August 27, 2010
The topic of environmental modelling was last addressed in Issue 34 of ERCIM News, in July 1998. Influenced by the Kyoto Protocol (adopted on 11 December 1997), public awareness of environmental problems had at that time reached a peak. The goal of this thematic issue is to look at the pervasion of modern information and communication technology into the environmental and ecological sciences.
The power of today's computational and communication resources means that we are able to create modelling, simulation and decision-support tools with unprecedented quality. Modelling the biosphere with ever-greater numbers of biotic and abiotic components remains a great challenge of our time. Climate research (space weather included) uses models dealing with varying scales and resolutions, and will require new architectures with access to distributed resources. Branch-oriented simulation systems should prove the right software tools to be flexibly adapted to the special structure and data of complex environmental systems.
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1z0-048 | HH0-120 | 1z0-042 | 000-101