Browsing by Subject "sociology"
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Item The Ecology and Sociology of the Mission-Aransas Estuary : An Estuarine and Watershed Profile(2012) Evans, Anne; Madden, Kiersten; Palmer, SallyThe Mission-Aransas National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) is one of 28 national estuarine reserves created to promote the responsible use and management of the nation's estuaries through a program combining scientific research, education, and stewardship. The purpose of this document is to provide researchers and resource managers with an adequate basis of knowledge to further development of scientific studies and applied management investigations. This document describes the different physical ecosystem components, ecological processes, habitats, and watersheds of the Reserve. The Mission-Aransas NERR is a complex of wetland, terrestrial, and marine environments. The land is primarily coastal prairie with unique oak motte habitats. The wetlands include riparian habitat, and freshwater and salt water marshes. Within the water areas, the bays are large, open, and include extensive wind tidal flats, seagrass meadows, mangroves, and oyster reefs. This site profile describes each habitat by their location, type, distribution, abundance, current status and trends, issues of concerns, and future research plans. Research within the Mission-Aransas NERR seeks to improve the understanding of the Texas coastal zone ecosystems structure and function. Current research includes: nutrient loading and transformation, estimates of community metabolism, water quality monitoring, freshwater inflow, climate change and fishery habitat. Harmful algal blooms, zooplankton, coliform bacteria, submerged aquatic vegetation, and marsh grass are monitored through the System- Wide Monitoring Program (SWMP). This document also describes the climate, hydrography and oceanography, geology, water quality, and endangered species within the Mission-AransasItem “Open-Minded Couple Seeking a Third”: Queer Women in the Digital Age(2018) Braaten, Elizabeth; Weinreb, AmyThe decline of the lesbian bar and the dawn of the digital age, combined with the lack of a sufficient digital hook-up space for queer women, leaves a gaping hole in the potential for lesbian visibility and sociability. In conceptualizing lesbian public space, I identify social barriers that both drive this negative phenomenon of invisibility and prevent the development of a comfortable digital space for queer women.Item Rationality in the Slum: An Essay on Interpretive Sociology(Comparative Studies in Society and History, 1972) Portes, AlejandroItem Social Impact Studies: Belton and Stillhouse Hollow Reservoirs(University of Texas at Austin, 1979-06) Chang, S.; Beard, L.R.Item Sociological Analysis and Politics: The Theories of Talcott Parsons by William C. Mitchell(The Journal of Politics, 1968) Bell, Roderick A.Item Technological Growth and Social Change: Achieving Modernization, by Stanley A. Hetzler(Business History Review, 1971) Rostow, W. W.Item The Texas Mathematics Teachers' Bulletin, Volume XXII(University of Texas at Austin, 1938-04-01) The University of Texas