14. ANONYMOUS, "How to Determine the Buoyancy of Bare and Concrete Coated Steel 

 Pipe in Water and Mud," Pipe Line Industry, Oct. 1956, p. 74. 



15. ANONYMOUS, "Setting up an Offshore Platform is Easy if You Know What You are 

 Doing," Oil and Gas Journal, June 1960, pp. 82—83. 



Keywords: Offshore oil platform, Santa Barbara, California 



Article briefly describes the installation of an offshore oil platform off the coast of 

 Santa Barbara, California. 



16. ANONYMOUS, "Blasting Methods for Outfall Sewer," Western Construction, May 



1962, pp. 62-64. 



Keywords: Construction methods. Outfall sewer, San Diego, California 



Several construction methods used in the initial construction phases of an ocean outfall 

 in San Diego, California, are described. Liquid explosives in plastic tubes were used to blast 

 a smooth bed for the pipe where it crossed a sawtooth ledge offshore, and also to blast a 

 trench for the pipeline in the shallow inshore water and surf zone. A prefabricated steel 

 trestle was constructed to place the 9-foot-diameter concrete pipeline through the surf zone; 

 foundation holes for this trestle were drilled with precision, using a special drilling rig. 



17. ANONYMOUS, "Determination of Net Buoyancy of Submerged Pipelines, Engineering 

 and Design— 3," Gas Distribution Manual, Pipe Line Industry, Vol. 19, No. 5, Nov. 



1963, pp. 66-67. 



18. ANONYMOUS, "Nuclear Power: The Year of Reckoning," Engineering, Apr. 1964. 



Keywords: Great Britain, Nuclear power station, Reactors 



A program for the development of nuclear power in Great Britain is briefly discussed. 

 The program consists of four nuclear power stations and nine reactors to be buUt between 

 1970 and 1975. The program is flexible; the use of "advanced gas-cooled reactor" or 

 "boiling water reactor" systems in the power stations is undecided. 



19. ANONYMOUS, "Cook Inlet Line Laid in Fluid Tidal Flats," World Petroleum, Vol. 38, 

 No. 8, Aug. 1967, pp. 56-60. 



Keywords: Cook Inlet, Alaska, Oil pipeUne 



The construction of a 42-mile, 20-inch-diameter crude oil pipeline on the northwest 

 shore of Cook Inlet, Alaska, is described. The pipeline was laid along two tidal flats 

 separated by a headland. The clearing, grading, and ditching along the pipeUne route, as well 

 as the pipe stringing, taping, and anchoring processes, are discussed. Due to the extreme 

 environmental conditions present in the area, several problems were encountered during 

 grading and especially during ditching operations. 



