In an effort to better quantify winter time particulate matter (PM) and the contribution of wood smoke to pollution events in Fresno, a field campaign was conducted between December 24th, 2003 and January 15, 2004. Over this three week period both coarse and fine daily PM samples were collected at five locations in Fresno including residential, urban, and industrial sites., "November 2005.", Funding agency: San Joaquin Valley-wide Air Pollution Study Agency Contract, Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-109)., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
D.H. Fairchild, J.E. Klett., Includes bibliographical references (page 103) and index., "Information contained in this publication was collected from the arboretum at the W.D. Holley Plant Environmental Research Center"--(page ii), Print version record.
"An underlying assumption of traditional hydrologic frequency analysis is that climate, and hence the frequency of hydrologic events, is stationary, or unchanging over time. A stationary series is relatively easy to forecast: one simply predicts that statistical properties will be the same in the future as they have been in the past. Anthropogenic climate change and better understanding of decadal and multi-decadal climate variability present a challenge to the validity of this assumption. The workshop ... was organized to present and discuss possible operational alternatives to the assumption of stationarity in hydrologic frequency analysis."--Abstract, Sponsored by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ... [et al.]., Includes bibliographical references.