ARCTIC EPIDEMIOLOGY 

 LITERATURE CITED 



1. Alaska Department of Health and Welfare. 1962. Bureau of Vital 



Statistics. Personal Communication. 



2. Babbot, F. L., Jr., W. W. Frye.and J. E. Gordon. 1961. Intestinal 



parasites of man in arctic Greenland. Am. J. Tropical Med. 

 Hyg. 10; 185-190. 



3. Bliss, L. C. 1962. Adaptations of arctic and alpine plants to en- 



vironmental conditions. Arctic 15: 117-144. 



4. Borrel, A. 1920. Pneumonie et tuberculose chez les troupes 



noires. Ann. Inst. Pasteur 34: 10 5-148. 



5. Bradly, P. J., and R.Rausch. 19 50. A preliminary note on trichi- 



nosis investigations in Alaska, Arctic 3: 10 5-107. 



6. Chang, S. L. 1954. Thesurvivalof cysts of Endamoeba histolytica 



in human feces under low temperature conditions. Annual 

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7. Cherchenko, I. I. 1961. Brucellosis in arctic regions. I. On 



brucellosis in reindeer. Zh.Mikrobiol. 32: 135-159. J. Micro- 

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8. Cherchenko, I. I. 1961. Brucellosis in arctic regions. II. On 



epidemiologic characteristics of a focus of brucellosis in 

 reindeer. Zh. Mikrobiol. 32: 118-123. 



9. Cherchenko, I. I., and N. I. Samsonova. 1961. Brucella infection 



in far northern regions. III. Clinical manifestations of "rein- 

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