Water quality {see also Great Lakes restoration) 

 future needs 



airlift rccirculators, V1-I32 



artificial destratirication, VI-132 



benefit-cost analysis, VI-130-131 



benefits, VI-1 30 



demographic trends, VI-130-131 



duration, VI-1 29-1 30 



interdependency of public and Government uses, 



Vl-129 

 Public Health Service 1965 report, Vl-131 

 restoration plan, Vl-131 

 sociological trends, VI-130-131 

 standards, VI-1 29 



water level quality desired in Great Lakes, VI-1 30 

 improvements 



agricultural runoff, VI-1 29 

 industrial wastewater treatment, VI-1 29 

 municipal wastewater treatment, VI-1 29 

 oil damages, VI-1 29 

 thermal discharges, VI-1 29 

 restoration 



biological control, Vl-128 

 chemical control of algae, VI-1 28 

 chemical inactivation, VI-1 28 

 dredging, VI-1 28 



flushing with low-nutrient water, VI-1 27 

 nutrient removal, VI-1 27 

 rough fish removal, VI-1 28 

 sealing bottom sediments, VI-1 27 

 thermal destratification, VI-1 28 

 Water Quality Act of 1965, III-53 

 Water Resources Council 

 coastal zone, III-146 

 interagency organization, national, 11-52 

 river basin commissions, III-104 

 Water Resources Planning Act of 1965, III-104 

 Water Resources Planning Act of 1965, Water Resources 



Council, III-l 04 

 Waters, E. D. {see Cook and Waters) 

 Waters, internal, jurisdictions, III-9 

 Waterways Experiment Station, U.S. Army Corps of 



Engineers, III-99 

 Waves, ocean dynamic factors, VI-67-71 

 W/D ratios (see Weight-to-displacement ratio) 

 Weather Bureau, U.S. 

 ESSA, III-90 



interagency organization, national, 11-51 

 monitoring system, 11-15 

 Wegener, Alfred, continental drift theory, 1-21 

 Weight-to-displacement ratio, materials, VI-41 

 Welland Canal, invasion of lamprey eel, 1-26, III-46 

 Westinghouse, capital sources, V-9 

 Whales 



Antarctic whaling, VIII-125-126 

 International Convention for the Regulation of 

 WhaUng,VIII-122-126 

 Whaling Commission, International (see Regulation of 



Whaling, International Convention) 

 WHO (see World Health Organization) 

 Wildlife and nutrient rich areas, loss 



causes, III-37 

 cstuarine habitat, 111-37 

 Massachusetts Coastal Wetlands Laws, III-37 

 mosquito control projects, 111-39 

 Rhode Island Marshland Zoning, 111-37 

 San Francisco Bay, 111-37, 38 

 zoning power over marshes, 111-37 

 Wilson, J. E., comment on relationship between technol- 

 ogy and economics in oil production, Vll-208 

 Wisconsin, coastal zone regulatory authority, III-l 27 

 WMO (see World Meteorological Organization) 

 Wolff, Paul, monitoring appraisal, 11-29, 31 

 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute 

 institutional needs, 1-45 

 oceanographic journals, 1-47 

 oceanography study, 1-18, 42, 46, 47 

 Working Group on Legal Questions Related to Scientific 

 Investigations of the Ocean 

 documentation on effect of sea law on research, 



VIII-134 

 legal aspects 



collecting data, VIII-134 

 scientific investigation, VIII-134 

 World Data Center, oceanographic data exchange, 



VIII-133 

 World Glory, need for monitoring and prediction system, 



n-9 



Worid Health Organization (WHO), pollution, VIII-79 

 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) 



appraisal, 11-61, 62 



interagency organization, international, 1-58; 11-59-60 



marine science education, VIII-133 



monitoring 



appraisal, 11-29-33 

 environmental, II-6-7, 13-14 

 system, 11-23 



organizations, international, 11-61 



World Weather Program, 11-60 

 World Weather Program, II-7 

 Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina 



erosion and hurricane project, III-32 



test facility, III-89 



X 



XBT (see Expendable bathythermograph) 



Y 



Yale University, I-l 8 

 Yttrium 



potential, VII-161 



substitute materials, VII-161 



supplies and prices, VII-161 



uses, VII-161 



Zinc, demand, VII-98 



Zircon 



potential, VII-1 6 2-1 6 3 

 substitute materials, VII-162 

 supplies and prices, VII-162 

 uses, VII-162 



Zuider Zee, coastal waters, III-42 



51 



U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 19 



