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         Rivers Curtis:     more books (99)
  1. Sunderland: A River Life by Jack Curtis,
  2. Methyl methacrylate (MMA) lane lines: I-90 Asahel Curtis I/C to Kachess River by C. Michael Miner, 1996
  3. The origin of the River Wey navigation: Being an account of the canalization of the river by Richard Scotcher, 1895
  4. Mitochondrial DNA variation among populations of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in the Chagrin River Drainage, Ohio and upper Ohio River drainage, Pennsylvania by Mary K. Burnham Curtis, 1998
  5. A cruise on the Benton: A narrative of combat on the Missouri River in the Civil War by Samuel S Curtis, 1967
  6. Mountain pine beetle infestation in Lodgepole pine, Roaring Fork and North Fork drainages, Little Snake River, Medicine Bow National Forest, 1983 (Biological evaluation) by Curtis G O'Neil, 1983
  7. PRESS KIT - THE RIVER WILD by Curtis, Dir Hanson, 1994-01-01
  8. Weather modification program, 1974, conducted over the Colorado River drainage area above Robert Lee, Texas, 15 April 1974-15 October 1974: Final report by Curtis D Smith, 1975
  9. A cultural arts and activities center for the Red River Valley area by Curtis E Bohn, 1982
  10. Irrigated crop production costs: Big Sioux and Vermillion river basins (FS) by Curtis A Everson, 1979
  11. The effect of flows in the Colorado River on reported and observed boating accidents in Grand Canyon (Glen Canyon environmental studies) by Curtis A Brown, 1987
  12. Impact of the proposed I-326 crossing on the 500-year flood stages of the Congaree River near Columbia, South Carolina (U.S. Geological Survey water-resources investigations report) by Curtis S Bennett, 1984
  13. Meditation at High Rocks on the Clackamas River (Lightfoot) by Walt Curtis, 1976
  14. Runnin' Crazy: A Portrait of the Genesee River by Ruth and Edward P. Curtis, Jr. Rosenberg-Naparsteck, 1996-01-01

101. Save Our Wild Salmon | Press Room | Document Detail
The Columbia and Snake rivers Campaign is a national collaboration of conservationists, commercial fishing families, sportfishers, businesses, and taxpayer
http://www.wildsalmon.org/pressroom/press-detail.cfm?docID=89

102. Herald.com | 07/11/2005 | Sick St. Lucie River Is Fading Fast
HOME TO SLIMY, MURKY WATERS, THE RIVER IS IN NEED OF A REMEDY BY curtis MORGAN Kevin Henderson, executive director of the St. Lucie River Initiative,
http://www.thestate.com/mld/miamiherald/news/weather/environment/12102624.htm
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News Sunday, Aug 21, 2005 Environment email this print this reprint or license this Posted on Mon, Jul. 11, 2005
ENVIRONMENT
Sick St. Lucie River is fading fast
HOME TO SLIMY, MURKY WATERS, THE RIVER IS IN NEED OF A REMEDY
BY CURTIS MORGAN
cmorgan@herald.com

PALM CITY
Everything from mullet to manatee used to meander under Mel Erb's dock along the St. Lucie River. Now, nothing. Even if life were swimming around, he couldn't spot it through water as murky as motor oil not to mention the blanket of green slime that suddenly sprouted last week. ''This is the St. Lucie River,'' Erb said with disgust, scooping glop that stuck to his hands like pulverized peas algae in full, foul bloom. ''My joke is I was finally able to afford waterfront property and then they killed the river.''

103. Going With The Flow, By Wayne Curtis
Standard fish passageways look more like dams than like the river, says 2003 Wayne curtis, All rights reserved. Do not repost or republish without
http://www.angelfire.com/journal/pondlilymill/curtis.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Angelfire Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next The Page Begins Here Going With The Flow, by Wayne Curtis, Preservation, July-August 2003.
A Mill Dam. The mill and mill dam in the colorized postcard maybe
Greider's Mill (a.k.a. Diller/Heishman Mill) on the Conodoguinet Creek,
Cumberland County, Carlisle, Pa. The old colorlized postcard is incorrectly labeled:
"Dam on Yellow Breeches Creek, New Cumberland, Pa."
This milll is not the Barnitz Mill on Yellow Breeches Creek.
A photograph may be worth a thousand words,
but captions and narratives on postcards are not necessarily scholarly works.
PRESERVATION July-August 2003
DAM TIME
Free the water but respect the past Going With The Flow by Wayne Curtis Photographs by Chris Hartlove Historic Dams are Being demolished or vastly altered to allow fish to return to their historic spawning grounds. Is there another way? W ILL FOSHAG SLIDES OPEN A WINDOW AND PEERS OUT from the second floor of Heishman's Mill, a stone red clapboard gristmill built by a family of Swiss Mennonites west of Carlisle, Pa. The Conodoguinet Creek, is a tributary of the Susquehanna River, is about 150 feet wide where it flows both around and beneath the mill, and hypnotically smooth sheets of water roar over a six-foot dam, churning up a white spume that folds back upon itself. On the this day of spring, the curiously sweet of manure on adjacent fields wafts past on the season's initial balmy breezes.

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