238 

 *Renshaw, C. 1969. The beaches of Long Island. Shore and Beach 37(2):50-59. 



This paper presents an account of the Long Island (New York) shore front, 

 with data included on Jones Beach, Hampton, Fire Island, Rockaway Beach, 

 and Southampton. 



239 



Ruzyla, K. 1973. Effects of erosion on barrier-island morphology, Fire 



Island, New York. Pages 219-237 i_n D. R. Coates, ed. Coastal geomorphol- 

 ogy: Part I, Barrier Islands. State University of New York, Binghamton. 



Deals with effects of erosion on Fire Island from 1959 to 1969 due to 

 wave action. 



240 



Sanders, J. E., and N. Kumar. 1975. Evidence of shoreface retreat and in- 

 place "drowning" during Holocene submergence of barriers, shelf off Fire 

 Island, New York. Geological Society of America Bulletin 86(l):65-76. 



This article discusses how barriers on the shelf off Fire Island have 

 responded, at different times within the Holocene period, to submergence 

 through the contrasting processes of in-place drowning and landward re- 

 treat. 



241 



U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 1975. Fire Island 



National Seashore Master Plan Draft. U.S. Government Printing Office, 



Washington, D.C. 



242 



Warren, H. A. 1976. Ecological studies of the Sunken Forest, Fire Island 



National Seashore, New York. National Park Service, Science Monograph 



Series, No. 7. 237 pp. 



This volume presents the methodology and results of a study in which 

 the vegetation, biomass, primary production and nutrient relationships 

 of the Sunken Forest at the Fire Island National Seashore were analyzed. 



243 

 *Renshaw, C. 1969. The beaches of Long Island. Shore and Beach 37(2) :50-59. 



This paper presents an account of the Long Island (New York) shore front, 

 with data included on Jones Beach, Hampton, Fire Island, Rockaway Beach, 

 and Southampton. 



Jones Beach Island 



Long Peach 

 50 



