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Fishery resources of the United States of America Full text
1945
Walford, Lionel A.
The term “fishery resources” is used in this book with a broad application. It includes the populations of the fishes and other organisms useful to men, the environment that makes life possible for them, the industry that exploits and utilizes them, and our knowledge about them by which we can conserve their productivity. This book aims to survey the present status of all these aspects of those fishery resources that are used or are available for use by United States anglers and commercial fishermen. It is planned primarily for the Congress, at its request, with the idea of giving to busy people, in condensed fashion, a perspective on its subject. (pdf contains 142 pages) | Scanned by U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service, Santa Cruz Library, February 2009.
Show more [+] Less [-]Elementær elektroteknikk m.v. til bruk ved kurser for undervisning i bruk av elektriske anlegg ombord i fiskefartøyer. Full text
1945
Fiskeridirektoratet
Liste over de pr. 1 februar 1945 godkjente oppkjøpere for ferskfiskpakkere og ferskfiskgrossister samt over fryserier, røkerier og hermetikkfabrikker som har fått tillatelse til å kjøpe fisk og sild m.v. direkte fra fisker eller fiskernes salgsorganisasjoner. Full text
1945
Fiskeridirektoratet
Fiskerilitteratur 1942 - 44 Full text
1945
Koefoed, Einar
Vintersildfisket 1944. (Stor- og vårsildfisket) Full text
1945
Vikse, Håkon
Vintersildfiskets lønnsomhet 1940 - 1943. En driftsøkonomisk undersøkelse Full text
1945
Gerhardsen, Gerhard Meidell
Statens Fiskeriforsøksstasjon. b: Analyser 1937-1942 Full text
1945
Notevarp, Olav
Report no. 1 (1944) Full text
1945
Cape of Good Hope (South Africa). Inland Fisheries Department.
As the nature of the inland waters of a country is dependent upon its geography and geology, a brief description of the physical features of the Cape Province follows as an introduction to this report. The Cape Province covers an area of 277,200 square miles, which is approximately 60% of the total area of the Union of South Africa. It has a rugged coastline of approximately 1,600 miles, which is washed by the cold Atlantic Ocean on the west, and the warmer Indian Ocean on the east. In the north it is partly bounded by the Orange River and Basutoland. The boundary with Natal is formed by the Umtamvuna and Urnzimkulu river system. Occupying a position between latitudes 240 40' and 340 50' south, it is well within the Temperate Zone. Geologically, the Province is composed by the Karoo System; a large tract of older granites and gneiss in the north-west; the Cape System; smaller areas of the Transvaal and Nama Systems and scattered outcrops of younger granites and the Cretaceous System. Large areas are covered by windblown or shrub-covered sand. Physically, the Province can be divided into a series of plains shelving
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