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Uniting Land and Sea. Kelly Scannell.

by Scannell, Kelly; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 36Science. Publisher: Blue Planet Quarterly, 2005ISSN: 1522-3264;.Subject(s): Estuaries | Estuarine ecology | Wetland ecology | Wetland restorationDDC classification: 050 Summary: "Serving as transition zones between land and sea, estuaries are partially enclosed bodies of water where freshwater draining from inland rivers and streams, mixes with saltwater from the ocean. Bays, lagoons, harbors, inlets, and sounds can all be estuaries if they contain this mix of fresh- and saltwater." (BLUE PLANET QUARTERLY) This article explains how estuaries are important "ecologically, economically, and culturally."
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REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 33 Science and Religious Fundamentalism in the 1920s. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 34 The Great Stem Cell Race. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 35 Killers in Paradise. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 36 Uniting Land and Sea. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 36 Heart of the Chesapeake. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 37 Buried Treasure. REF SIRS 2006 Science Article 38 Toxic Surfs.

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.

Originally Published: Uniting Land and Sea, Summer 2005; pp. 20-25.

"Serving as transition zones between land and sea, estuaries are partially enclosed bodies of water where freshwater draining from inland rivers and streams, mixes with saltwater from the ocean. Bays, lagoons, harbors, inlets, and sounds can all be estuaries if they contain this mix of fresh- and saltwater." (BLUE PLANET QUARTERLY) This article explains how estuaries are important "ecologically, economically, and culturally."

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