Remixxing the mainstream news one blog post at a time from the shores of Venice Beach. News, politics & conspiracy theories about world issues. All posts are opinions meant to foster comment, reporting, teaching & study under the "fair use doctrine" in Sec. 107 of U.S. Code Title 17. No statement of fact is made or should be implied. Ads appearing on this blog are solely the product of Blogger.com and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Remixx World!
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Arizona Governor Jan Brewer Tells President Obama That She Will Not Surrender Any Part of the State
FDA Ready to Approve First Genetically Engineered Animal for People to Eat (AquAdvantage® Salmon)
The Food and Drug Administration is seriously considering whether to approve the first genetically engineered animal that people would eat — salmon that can grow at twice the normal rate.
The official press release from AquaBounty Technologies is below.
###
15 June 2010
AquaBounty Technologies, Inc.
(“AquaBounty” or the “Company”)
Update on FDA Approval for AquAdvantage® Salmon
AquaBounty Technologies, Inc. (AIM: ABTX), a biotechnology company focused on enhancing productivity in the aquaculture market, announces progress on their pending New Animal Drug Application (“NADA”) for AquAdvantage® Salmon (“AAS”) from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
The Company confirms that it has received two further letters from the Center for Veterinary Medicine (“CVM”) advising that they have completed their review on sections four and five of the seven sections of the application. These two recent letters indicate acceptance of the AAS data supporting the durability of its genotype and phenotype, showing that the product is stable and unchanged over multiple generations.
The Company believes that the reviews for the remaining two parts of the application are very nearly complete. As reported previously, all technical submissions necessary for the review and approval of the product have been made and acknowledged. Management has worked constructively with CVM’s reviewers to answer all questions and is confident of a successful outcome in the near future.
Following formal acceptance of the remaining two technical sections, it is expected that CVM will announce the holding of a Veterinary Medical Advisory Committee meeting on AAS as the next step in their formal process for approval of the product.
For further information, please contact:
AquaBounty Technologies
+1 781 899 7755
David Frank,
Chief Financial Officer
Nomura Code Securities
+44 (0)20 7776 1200
Richard Potts, Giles Balleny
Corfin Communications
+44 (0)20 7977 0020
Harry Chathli, Neil Thapar, Claire Norbury
White House Readies National Online Identification Plan (The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace by Howard Schmidt)
The Obama administration is set to propose a new system for authenticating people, organizations and infrastructure on the Web. The online authentication and identity management system would be targeted at the transactional level -- for example, when someone logs into their banking website or completes an online e-commerce purchase.
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The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace
Posted by Howard A. Schmidt on June 25, 2010 at 02:00 PM EDT
Cyberspace has become an indispensible component of everyday life for all Americans. We have all witnessed how the application and use of this technology has increased exponentially over the years. Cyberspace includes the networks in our homes, businesses, schools, and our Nation’s critical infrastructure. It is where we exchange information, buy and sell products and services, and enable many other types of transactions across a wide range of sectors. But not all components of this technology have kept up with the pace of growth. Privacy and security require greater emphasis moving forward; and because of this, the technology that has brought many benefits to our society and has empowered us to do so much -- has also empowered those who are driven to cause harm.
Today, I am pleased to announce the latest step in moving our Nation forward in securing our cyberspace with the release of the draft National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC). This first draft of NSTIC was developed in collaboration with key government agencies, business leaders and privacy advocates. What has emerged is a blueprint to reduce cybersecurity vulnerabilities and improve online privacy protections through the use of trusted digital identities.
The NSTIC, which is in response to one of the near term action items in the President’s Cyberspace Policy Review, calls for the creation of an online environment, or an Identity Ecosystem as we refer to it in the strategy, where individuals and organizations can complete online transactions with confidence, trusting the identities of each other and the identities of the infrastructure that the transaction runs on. For example, no longer should individuals have to remember an ever-expanding and potentially insecure list of usernames and passwords to login into various online services. Through the strategy we seek to enable a future where individuals can voluntarily choose to obtain a secure, interoperable, and privacy-enhancing credential (e.g., a smart identity card, a digital certificate on their cell phone, etc) from a variety of service providers – both public and private – to authenticate themselves online for different types of transactions (e.g., online banking, accessing electronic health records, sending email, etc.). Another key concept in the strategy is that the Identity Ecosystem is user-centric – that means you, as a user, will be able to have more control of the private information you use to authenticate yourself on-line, and generally will not have to reveal more than is necessary to do so.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), a key partner in the development of the strategy, has posted the draft NSTIC at www.nstic.ideascale.com. Over the next three weeks (through July 19th), DHS will be collecting comments from any interested members of the general public on the strategy. I encourage you to go to this website, submit an idea for the strategy, comment on someone else’s idea, or vote on an idea. Your input is valuable to the ultimate success of this document. The NSTIC will be finalized later this fall.
Thank you for your input!
Howard A. Schmidt is the Cybersecurity Coordinator and Special Assistant to the President
Source: Information Week ; Homeland Security Television Network ; White House
G4 Covers BP Gulf Oil Spill (Realest Mainstream Reporting on Disaster I've Seen)
http://g4tv.com/videos/46971/BP-Oil-Spill-Effect-on-Wildlife/
Friday, June 25, 2010
Gasland - A Film by Josh Fox (Video Trailer)
"The largest domestic natural gas drilling boom in history has swept across the United States. The Halliburton-developed drilling technology of "fracking" or hydraulic fracturing has unlocked a "Saudia Arabia of natural gas" just beneath us. But is fracking safe? When filmmaker Josh Fox is asked to lease his land for drilling, he embarks on a cross-country odyssey uncovering a trail of secrets, lies and contamination. A recently drilled nearby Pennsylvania town reports that residents are able to light their drinking water on fire. This is just one of the many absurd and astonishing revelations of a new country called GASLAND. Part verite travelogue, part expose, part mystery, part bluegrass banjo meltdown, part showdown."
GASLAND will be broadcast on HBO through 2012. To host a public screening in your community please click here. The DVD will be on sale in December 2010.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
President George W. Bush Returns as Christian Koreans Pray for Unity Between North & South at 60th Anniversary Event
The event commemorated the 60th anniversary of the Korean War, but was also held to pray about tensions between North and South Korea following the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.Source: CBN
Former President George W. Bush attended the event and praised the Korean people for rising from the ruins of war to become the world's 10th largest economy.
Whooping Cough Is Now an Epidemic Says California Department of Public Health (CDPH)
Each dose of Adacel vaccine (0.5 mL) contains the following active ingredients:
- Acellular Pertussis
- Detoxified Pertussis Toxin (PT) 2.5 μg
- Filamentous Hemagglutinin (FHA) 5 μg
- Pertactin (PRN) 3 μg
- Fimbriae Types 2 and 3 (FIM) 5 μg
- Tetanus Toxoid (T) 5 Lf
- Diphtheria Toxoid (d) 2 Lf
- Other ingredients per dose include 1.5 mg aluminum phosphate (0.33 mg aluminum) as the adjuvant, ≤5 μg residual formaldehyde,
WHOOPING COUGH EPIDEMIC MAY BE WORST IN 50 YEARS
Date: 6/23/2010
Number: 10-041
Contact: Al Lundeen (916) 440-7259
SACRAMENTO
Urging Californians to get vaccinated now, Dr. Mark Horton, director of the California Department of Public Health (CDPH), warned today that the state is on pace to suffer the most illnesses and deaths due to pertussis, also known as whooping cough, in 50 years.
“Whooping cough is now an epidemic in California,” Horton said. “Children should be vaccinated against the disease and parents, family members and caregivers of infants need a booster shot.”
As of June 15, California had recorded 910 cases of pertussis, a four-fold increase from the same period last year when 219 cases were recorded. Five infants — all under three months of age — have died from the disease this year. In addition, 600 more possible cases of pertussis are being investigated by local health departments.
Pertussis is cyclical. Cases tend to peak every two to five years. In 2005, California recorded 3,182 cases and eight deaths.
Pertussis is a highly contagious disease. Unimmunized or incompletely immunized young infants are particularly vulnerable. Since 1998, more than 80 percent of the infants in California who have died from pertussis have been Hispanic.
The pertussis vaccine is safe for children and adults. Pertussis vaccination begins at two months of age, but young infants are not adequately protected until the initial series of three shots is complete at 6 months of age. The series of shots that most children receive wears off by the time they finish middle school. Neither vaccination nor illness from pertussis provides lifetime immunity.
Pregnant women may be vaccinated against pertussis before pregnancy, during pregnancy or after giving birth. Fathers may be vaccinated at any time, but preferably before the birth of their baby. CDPH encourages birthing hospitals to implement policies to vaccinate new mothers and fathers before sending newborns home. CDPH is providing vaccine free of charge to hospitals.
Others who may have contact with infants, including family members, healthcare workers, and childcare workers, should also be vaccinated. Individuals should contact their regular health care provider or local health department to inquire about pertussis vaccination.
A typical case of pertussis in children and adults starts with a cough and runny nose for one-to-two weeks, followed by weeks to months of rapid coughing fits that sometimes end with a whooping sound. Fever is rare.
Mika Brzezinski Admits Working with President Obama's White House on BP Oil Spill Talking Points
Maywood, California Fires All City Workers and Subcontracts All Services Effective July 1, 2010
In addition to contracting with the Sheriff's Department, the Maywood City Council voted unanimously Monday night to lay off an estimated 100 employees and contract with neighboring Bell, which will handle other city services such as finance, records management, parks and recreation, street maintenance and others. Maywood will be billed about $50,833 monthly, which officials said will save $164,375 annually.
Source: LA Times Blogs
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Launches Propaganda Comic Book Called "The Story of Inflation"
The FRBNY has published a comic book, full of the misadventures of the infamous Darth Inflation. With such zingers as "By discouraging saving, inflation can harm the US economy. That's because the economy needs a supply of savings to provide the funds for people and business to borrow so that they can invest in the things that help the US economy grow" it is now clear that the entire FRBNY Board is comprised of lunatics, as apparently these people have not heard of ZIRP, QE, 0% interest on money markets and savings accounts, and must have Apple gizmos.
16.5 Million Baby Salmon Released into California Waterways Including San Pablo Bay
The state Department of Fish and Game says most of the...young salmon smolts were released into San Pablo Bay, located between the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Source: The Guardian
Physical Behavior of Oil in the Ocean - MMS Project No. 120 (Buoyancy Behavior, Solubility, Evaporation, Dispersion, Photo-Oxidation & Emulsification)
Project Number | 120 |
Date of Summary | April 5, 2002 |
Subject | Physical Behavior of Oil in the Ocean |
Performing Activity | Emergencies Science Division, Environment Canada |
Principal Investigator | Mr. Merv F. Fingas |
Contracting Agency | Minerals Management Service |
Estimated Completion | |
Description | This is a Joint Industry Project (JIP) between MMS and Environment Canada to study oil behavior and oil properties, particularly those of heavy oils. The study includes: buoyancy behavior, solubility, evaporation, dispersion, photo-oxidation, and emulsification. Several information gaps were identified on the behavior of oils where more experimental work is needed: 1) the kinetics of oil emulsification; 2) the rate of solubilization; and 3) the rate of dispersion. Experiments will be conducted to study these processes in context with the typical environmental variables of temperature, wind speed, sea state, and oil type. This study initially focused on heavy oils similar to those in the Pacific and Canadian Outer Continental Shelf Regions, it was expanded to include other domestically produced oils and oils which are shipped in large quantities through the OCS. The physical and chemical properties of oils from a number of crude oils from deepwater Gulf of Mexico have been analyzed and have been entered in the Crude Oils and Oil Products. This new version of the oil properties catalog contains information on more than 450 different types of oils was put on the Internet. The Internet site is very successful with as many as 1,000 hits per week. Work continues on the BOSS (Behavior of Spilled OilS) project. The final version of oil-in-ice behavior is complete and has been distributed. Work is almost complete on the emulsification and solubility chapters. The Basics of Oil Spills book is complete and been printed. The book is available for purchase via the Internet. The Oil Catalog can be found at Environment Canada’s Internet website at http://www.ec.gc.ca/envhome.html. |
Progress | |
Reports | |
AA (6 pages) | Fingas, M., Heavy Oil Behavior in the Ocean, Proceedings of Technology Assessment and Research Program for Offshore Minerals Operations Workshop, Minerals Management Service, Herndon, Virginia, pp., 144-147, 1988. |
AB (86 pages) | Juszko, B.A., Determination of Oceanographic Factors Associated with the Subsurface Movement of Oil, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-66, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 74 pp., July 1985. |
AC (62 pages) | Wilson, D., Poon, Y. C., Mackay, D., An Exploratory Study of the Buoyancy Behavior of Weathered Oils in Water, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-85, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 50 pp., June 1986. |
AD (90 pages) | Clark, B., Parsons, J., Yen, C., Ahier, B., Alexander, J., Mackay, D., A Study of Factors Influencing Oil Submergence, Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-90, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 77 pp., May 1987. |
AE (78 pages) | Wilson, D. G., Mackay, D., The Behavior of Oil in Freezing Situations, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE- 92, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 65 pp., December 1987. |
AF (54 pages) | Mackay, D., Formation and Stability of Water-in-Oil Emulsions, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-93, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 44 pp., December 1987. |
AG (142 pages) | Buist, I., Joyce, S., Dickins, D. F., Oil Spills in Leads: Tank Tests and Modeling, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-95, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 59 pp., December 1987. |
AH (88 pages) | Ross, S. L., The Transient Submergence of Oil Spills: Tank Tests and Modeling, Draft Copy, S. L. Ross Environmental Research Limited, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, March 1987. also published as Ross, S. L., The Transient Submergence of Oil Spills: Tank Tests and Modeling, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE- 96, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 56 pp., December 1987. |
AI (88 pages) | Godon, A. M., Milgram, J. H., Report on the In-Tank Mixing Study, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-100, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 83 pp., February 1988. |
AJ (56 pages) | Chau, A., Mackay, D., A Study of Oil Dispersion: The Role of Mixing and Weathering, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-104, Environ. Can., Ottawa, Ontario 46 pp., June 1988. |
AK (130 pages) | Owens, E. H., Humphrey, B., Long Term Fate and Persistence of Stranded Oil from the BIOS Project, N.T.W., Canada and from the Metula Spill, Tierra Del Fuego, Chile, 1987 Results, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-107, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 109 pp., December 1988. |
AL (90 pages) | Ross, S. L., Dickins, D. F., Modeling of Oil Spills in Snow, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-109, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 48 pp., December 1988. |
AM (71 pages) | Lee, S. C., Mackay, D., Bonville, F., Joner, E., Shiu, W. Y., A Study of the Long-Term Weathering of Submerged and Overwashed Oil, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-119, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario 61 pp., December 1989. |
AN (27 pages) | Lee, S. C., Mackay, D., Bonville, F., Joner, E., Shiu, W. Y., The Long-Term Weathering of Submerged and Overwashed Oil, Proceedings of the Twelfth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 33-60, 1989. |
AO (26 pages) | Lee, S. C., Shiu, W. Y., Mackay, D. The Long-Term Weathering of Heavy Crude Oils: Experimental Measurements and Development of Models, Proceedings of the Thirteenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, June 6-8, 1990, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, 1990. |
AP (19 pages) | Bobra, M., Tennyson, E. J., Photooxidation of Petroleum, Proceedings of the Twelfth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 129- 147, 1989. |
AQ (31 pages) | Bobra, M., A Study of the Formation of Water-in-Oil Emulsions, Proceedings of the Thirteenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, June 6-8, 1990, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. |
AR (554 pages) | Bobra, M., Callaghan, S., A Catalog of Crude Oil and Oil Product Properties (1990 version), Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-125, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, 542 pp., September 1990. |
AS (24 pages) | Bobra, M., Water-in-Oil Emulsification: A Physicochemical Study, Proceedings of the 1991 International Oil Spill Conference, Consultchem, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, 1991. |
AT (342 pages) | Dickins, D. F., Behavior of Spilled Oil at Sea (BOSS): Oil-in-Ice Fate and Behavior, DF Dickins Associates and Fleet Technology Ltd. for Environment Canada, March 1992. |
AU (58 pages) | Humphrey, B., Owens, E. H., Sergy, G., The Fate and Persistence of Stranded Crude Oil: A Nine-Year Overview from the BIOS Project, Baffin Island, N.T.W., Canada, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EPS/3/SP/4, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, March 1992. |
AV (12 pages) | Bobra, M., Fingas, M., Tennyson, E., When Oil Spills Emulsify, reprint from CHEMTECH No. 22, pp. 236-241, 1992. |
AW (144 pages) | Lee, S. C., Shiu, W. Y., Mackay, D. A Study of the Long Term Fate and Weathering of Heavy Oils, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-128, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, April 1992. |
AX (42 pages) | Bobra, M., Solubility Behavior of Petroleum Oils in Water, Consultchem, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE- 130, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 1992. |
AY (88 pages) | Bobra, M., Photolysis of Petroleum, Consultchem, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-131, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 1992. |
AZ (74 pages) | Bobra, M., A Study of Water-in-Oil Emulsification, Consultchem, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-132, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 1992. |
BA (150 pages) | Bobra, M., A Study of the Evaporation of Petroleum Oils, Consultchem, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-135, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 1992. |
BB (66 pages) | Fowler, B., Hamilton, M. C., Chiddell, G., Sojo, L., Method Development for the Analysis of Tainting Compounds, Seakem Oceanography Ltd., Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-136, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 1992. |
BC (546 pages) | Whiticar, S., Bobra, M., Callaghan, S., Luizzo, P., Fingas, M., Jokuty, P., Ackerman, F., Cao, J., A Catalog of Crude Oil and Oil Product Properties (1992 version) Draft, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, 791 pp., 1992. |
BD (86 pages) | Cao, J. R., Microwave Digestion of Crude Oils and Oil Properties for the Determination of Trace Metals and Sulphur by Inductively- Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission-Spectroscopy, Cao Research, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-140, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, October 1992. |
BE (46 pages) | Mackay, D., Charles, M. E., Lee, S. C., Lun, R., Ooigen, H., Romocki, K., Harner, T., Ralfs, M., Studies of the Dissolution and Long Term Weathering of Spilled Crude Oils, Environmental Emergency Manuscript Report Number EE-145, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, April, 1993. |
BF (8 pages) | Fingas, M., Fieldhouse, B., Bobra, M., Tennyson, E., The Physics and Chemistry of Emulsions, Proceedings of the Workshop on Emulsions, Marine Spill Response Corporation, Washington, D.C., 7 pp. 1993. |
BG (8 pages) | Fingas, M., Evaporation of Oil Spills, submitted to the Journal of ASCE, in press, 1994. |
BH (48 pages) | Wang, Z., Fingas, M., Quantitative Oil Analysis Method, Proceedings of the Seventeenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 8-10, 1994 |
BI (30 pages) | Fingas, M., Fieldhouse, B., Mullin, J., Studies of Water-In-Oil Emulsions and Techniques to Measure Emulsion Treating Agents, Proceedings of the Seventeenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 8-10, 1994. |
BJ (21 pages) | Wang, Z., Fingas, M., Study of the Effects of Weathering on the Chemical Composition of a Light Crude Oil, Proceedings of the Seventeenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 8-10, 1994. |
BK (9 pages) | Jokuty, P., Fingas, M., Oil Analytical Techniques for Environmental Purposes, Proceedings of the Seventeenth Arctic and Marine Oil Spill Program Technical Seminar, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 8-10, 1994. |
BL (10 pages) | Fingas, M., Wang, Z., Jokuty, P., Lambert, P., Fieldhouse B., Sergy, G., Mullin, J., Oil Behavior, Fate and Modeling Projects, Second International Oil Spill Research and Development Forum, pp. 399-407, London, May 23-26, 1995. |
BM (534 pages) | Hollebone, B.P., Permann, Delmar N.S., Oil-in-Ice Fate and Behaviour a Subsection of the Behaviour of Oil Spills (BOSS) Project (DRAFT), Environment Canada, Emergencies Science Division, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, November 1996. |
BN (16 pages) | Fingas, Merv, Fieldhouse, Ben, Mullin, Joe, `Studies of Water-in- Oil Emulsions: The Role of Asphaltenes and Resins`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 73-88, 1996. |
BO (24 pages) | Wang, Z., Fingas M., Landriault M., Sigouin L., Feng Y., `Using Systematic and Comparative GC/MS and GC/FID Data to Identify the Source on Contaminated Birds`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 199-222, 1996. |
BP (20 pages) | Jokuty, P., Whiticar, S., McRoberts, K., Mullin, J., `Oil Adhesion Testing: Recent Results`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 9/27, 1996. |
BQ (22 pages) | Wang, Zhendi, Fingas, Merv, `Separation and Characterization of Petroleum Hydrocarbons and Surfactant in Orlmulsion Dispersion Samples`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 115-135, 1996. |
BR (4 pages) | Fingas, Merv and Fieldhouse, Ben, `Water in Oil Emulsions: How They are Formed and Broken, Proceedings of the 1995 International Oil Spill Conference, pp.829-830, Long Beach, California, February 27-March 2, 1995. |
BS (16 pages) | Fingas, M.F., Kyle, D.A., Wang, Z., Huang E., and Mullin, J., `Characterization of Oil in the Water Column and on the Surface After Chemical Dispersion`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 481-496, 1996. |
BT (6 pages) | Fingas, M., Jokuty, P., Fieldhouse B., Oil Spill Behaviour and Modeling, Eco-Informa '96, Lake Buena Vista, Florida, November 4- 7, 1996. |
BU (24 pages) | Wang, Zhendi, Fingas, Merv, Study of the Effects of Weathering on the Chemical Composition of a Light Crude Oil Using GC/MS GC/FID, 17th International Symposium on Capillary Chromatography and Electrophoresis, Wintergreen, Virginia, May 1995. |
BV (44 pages) | Fingas, Merv, `The Evaporation of Oil Spills: Variation with Temperature and Correlation with Distillation Data`, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 27-72, 1996. |
BW (18 pages) | Fingas, Merv, `The Evaporation of Oil Spills`, Proceedings of the Eighteenth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp. 43-60, 1995. |
BX (18 pages) | Wang, Z., Fingas M., Landriault M., Sigouin L., Feng Y., `Using Systematic and Comparative Analytical Data to Identify the Source of an Unknown Oil on Contaminated Birds`, Journal of Chromatography A, 775, (1997), 251-265. |
BY (526 pages) | Hollebone, B.P., The Fate and Behaviour of Oil in Freezing Environments, DRAFT, Emergencies Science Division, Environmental Technology Center, Environmental Protection Service, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. |
BZ (22 pages) | Fingas, Merv, Fieldhouse, Ben, and Mullin, Joseph, Studies of Water-in-Oil Emulsion: Stability Studies, Proceedings of the Twentieth Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technical Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp 1-20, 1997. |
CA (10 pages) | Jokuty, P., Whiticar, S., Wang, Z., Landriault, M., Sigouin L., Mullin, J., A New Method for the Determination of Wax Content of Crude Oils, Proceedings of the Twentieth Arctic Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, pp 63-72,1997. |
CB (2 pages) | Fingas, Merv, Fieldhouse, Ben, and Mullin, Joseph, Studies of Water-in-Oil Emulsion: Stability Studies, Spill Science & Technology Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 189-190, 1996. |
CC (4 pages) | Jokuty, P., Whiticar, S., Wang, Z., Landriault, M., Sigouin L., Mullin, J., A New Method for the Determination of Wax Content of Crude Oils, Spill Science & Technology Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 195-198, 1996. |
CE (24 pages) | Fingas, M. Fieldhouse Studies of Water in Oil Emulsions: Energy Threshold of Emulsion Formation In Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technology Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp 57-68, 1998. |
CF (22 pages) | Fingas, M. Fieldhouse Studies of Water in Oil Emulsions: Energy Threshold of Emulsion Formation In Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Arctic Marine Oilspill Program Technology Seminar, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, pp 1-25, 1998. |
CG (12 pages) | Fingas, M. Fieldhouse Water in Oil Emulsions: Results of Formation Studies and Application to Oil Spill Modelling Vol. 5 No 1 pp 81-91,1999. |
CH (9 pages) | Fingas, Merv; Fieldhouse, Ben; Lane, James; Mullin, Joseph. Studies of Water-in-Oil Emulsions: Lohng-Term Stability, Oil Properties, and Emulsions Formed at Sea. |
CI (10 pages) | Fingas, Merv; Fieldhouse, Ben; Lane, James; Mullin, Joseph. Studies of Water-in-Oil Emulsions: Energy and Work Threshold for Emulsion Formation. |