Isle of Palms 



927 



Coker, W. C. 1905. Observations on the flora of the Isle of Palms, 

 Charleston, South Carolina. Torreya 5(8) :135-145. 



GEORGIA 



928 



Clement, C. and J. I. Richardson. 1971. Recreation on the Georgia coast: 

 an ecological approach. Georgia Business 30(11) : 1-24 . 



929 



Metzen, W. D. 1978. Islands in the sun. National Wildlife 16(1) :54-62. 



A popular account of the ownership status and ecological value of 

 Georgia's barrier islands. 



930 

 *Neuhauser, H. 1976-77. Our golden legacy: Georgia's barrier islands. 

 Coastal Ouarterly 2(3):6-9. 



Discusses man's threat and the environmental status of 15 individual 

 islands along Georgia's coast. 



931 

 *Warner, L. 1976. The status of the barrier islands of southeastern coast: 

 a summary of the barrier islands inventory. Open Space Institute, Mew 

 York, and Natural Resources Defense Council, New York, M.Y. 43 pp. 



The pertinent data from Warner and Strauss (1976) were summarized in 

 this abbreviated report. 



932 

 *Warner, L., and D. Strauss. 1976. Inventory of the barrier islands of the 



southeastern coast. Open Space Institute, New York, and Natural Resources 

 Defense Council, New York, N.Y. 300 pp. 



This inventory of the barrier islands of Virginia, North Carolina, 

 South Carolina, and Georgia summarizes information on each island's size 

 (all over 200 acres), development status, ownership, property assessments, 

 and local land-use regulations. Of the 81 islands in the study area, 27 

 were largely owned by the State or Federal government; 9 were owned by 

 private, nonprofit organizations; and the remaining 45 islands were pre- 

 dominantly privately owned. The authors state that nearly half the 

 privately owned islands were threatened by recent and anticipated real 

 estate development. 



198 



