Record Details
Field | Value |
---|---|
Title | page 155 |
Relation | River in Common |
Date | 2005-01-12 to 2005-02-16 |
Rights | This item is in the public domain. Acknowledgement of the University of Oregon Libraries as a source is requested. |
Type | page |
Format | Scanned from originals using Silverfast AI 6.0 on UMAX Powerlook III flatbed scanner. Scanned images saved as 16 bit grayscale tiffs. 188.13 kb 8 bit - Gray Gamma 2.2 - greyscale Omnipage 14 used to OCR 8 bit grayscale tiffs and generate text files for full text access. 16 bit grayscale tiffs edited in Photoshop 6.0: cropped, rotated, reduced in size, levels adjusted, bit depth reduced to 8 and JPEGs created. |
Description | individual initiatives, and how do we link them analytically with a large collection of other measures to determine whether they add up, or even if we have a solvable problem? These are complex scientific questions. They have to do with how much we know about ecosystems work and how they respond to human interventions. Ecosystem science is itself a peculiar science—more like economics or weather prediction than chemistry or physics, and so we probably will never have the clear answers... |
Identifier | http://oregondigital.org/u?/wwdl,1383 |