190 
17. 
18. 
Underwater Television, W. R. Stamp. (Scien- 
tific American, vol. 188, no.6, June 1953, 
pp 32-37). 
MARINE METEOROLOGY. 
Oceanography for Meteorologists, Harald 
Ulrik Sverdrup. New York, Prentice-Hall. 
1942. 2h6 p. Technical. 
Meteorology, with marine applications, 
William L. Donn. 2d. ed. New York, McGraw- 
Hill, 1951. 65 p. $7.00. Easy college 
text, for layman, student, and mariner. 
A Mariner's Meteorology, Charles Greham 
Halpine and Halton Hagen Taylor. Princeton, 
New Jersey, Van Nostrad, 1956. 371 p. $8.00. 
Textbook for Naval Academy Midshipmen. 
Oceanography for the Navy Meteorologist. 
Norfolk, U.S. Navy Weather Research Facility, 
1960. 128 p. (NavWeps 50-1P-547). Tech- 
nical and specialized. 
Atlantic Hurricanes, Gordon E. Dunn and 
Banner J. Miller. Baton Rouge, Louisiana 
State University Press, 1960. 290 p. 
$10.00. Technical. 
Hurricanes, Their Nature and History: 
particularly those of the West Indies and 
the southern coasts of the United States, 
Ivan Ray Tannehill. 9th ed. Princeton, 
New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 
1956. 308 p. $4.50. 
Hurricane, Marjory Stoneman Douglas. New 
York, Rinehart, 1958. 393 p. $5.95. A 
most readable history of American hurricanes. 
Weather of the San Francisco Bay Region. 
Harold Thompson Gilliam. Berkeley, University 
of California Press, 1962. 72 p. $1.50. 
How the ocean affects San Francisco's 
weather. 
RESOURCES OF THE SEA (excluding fisheries, 
for which see section 22). 
The Sun. the Sea, and Tomorrow; potential 
sources of food, energy, and minerals from 
the sea, Frederick George Walton Smith and 
Henry Chapin. New York, Scribner. 195. 
210 2. 
Ocean Harvest; the future of oceanography. 
Helen Wolff Vogel and Mary L. Caruso. New 
York, Knopf, 1961. 144 p. $3.00. The 
ocean as a potential source of food, minerals, 
and fresh water, for ages 10 to 
19. 
NATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHIC PROGRAM—1965 
Raw Materials from the Sea, Edward Frankland 
Armstrong and L. M. Miall. Leicester, 
England. Constructive Publications, Ltd., 
1945. 164 p. On the sea as a source of 
minerals and fresh water. 
Minerals on the Ocean Floor, John L. Mero. 
(Scientific American, vol.203, no.6, Dec. 
1960, pp.6-72). 
Calypso Exqplores for Underwater Oil, Jacques- 
Yves Cousteau. (National Geographic Magazine, 
vol.107. no.2, Aug. 1955. pp.155-8). Easy. 
Fresh Water from the Ocean. for Cities, 
Industry,and Irrigation, Cecil Byrne Ellis. 
New York, Ronald Press, 1954. 217 p. $6.00. 
A little technical. 
Salt-water Purification, K. S. Spiegler. 
New York, Wiley, 1962. 167 p. $9.50. 
Summarizes the present state of the art; 
technical in spots. 
MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY. 
Treatise on Marine Ecology and Paleoecology, 
Joel Walker Hedgpeth and Harry S. Ladd. 
New York, 1957. 2 vols. (Geological 
Society of America. Memoir 67). $22.50. 
Technical. 
Marine Ecology. Hilary B. Moore. New York, 
Wiley, 1958. 93 p. $9.50. College 
textbook. 
Zoogeography of the Sea, Sven Petrus Ekman. 
London. Sidgwick and Jackson. 1953. 17 p. 
Technical. 
The Biology of Marine Animals, Joseph 
Arthur Colin Nicol. New York, Interscience, 
1960. 707 p. $1.00. Technical. 
Aspects of Deep Sea Biology, Norman Bertram 
Marshall. New York, Philosophical Library. 
1954. 380 p. $10.00. Technical. 
Creatures of the Deep Sea, Klaus Gunther 
and Kurt Deckert. New York, Scribner, 1956. 
222 p. 
Symposium on Marine Microbiology. Carl k. 
Oppenheimer. Springfield. Illinois, Thomas, 
1963. 928 p. In press. 
Marine Microbiology: a monograph on hydro- 
bacteriology, Claude Echraim lobell. 
Waltham, Mass.. Chronica Botanica, 196. 
240 2. Technical. 
Nature Adrift; the story of marine plankton. 
cames Fraser. Chester Springs, Pennsylvania, 
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