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Place
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Identifier Type Subject Title Web Resource
2387
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Pulling Natures Linchpin:
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=ab565dbb28684267922e0ed8e18a5fe8
Description:
A Study of Potential Correlations between Declining bat Populations and Modern Mosquito-born Epidemics
1194
  • Map
  • Other
Arizona: Fires and Public Lands
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=9787069771304261b1c47f03097071d8
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Chloe Hanken in GIS Spring 2017.
1195
  • Map
  • Other
Cetacean Distribution in a Changing Climate
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=57405eaf567b4614a5b50f91a8150afe
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Kate Pielmeier in GIS Fall 2017.
1201
  • Map
  • Other
Puzzle of Packs
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=46c23dc6eda24198baa75c8d27f1ae89
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Jenny Reichert in GIS Winter 2019.
1200
  • Map
  • Other
River Herring in Maine
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=20deda8cef8b415f9e7a0fb44bf9bc1a
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Henry Luedtke in GIS Winter 2018.
1121
  • Map
  • Other
RefuGIS: mapping the reality of asylum seekers and migrants in Italy
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=151f8419d7ec40c39f3b34f36954793c
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Eva Trotta in GIS Fall 2018.
1198
  • Map
  • Other
Snowy Owl Ecology and the Mystery of Irruptions
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=143a0549801f4bfdbf49f7ad437d07c5
Description:
ESRI Story Map created by COA student Lea Savarese in GIS Spring 2017.
2142
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Rockweed in Frenchman Bay
  • http://bit.ly/RockweedFrenchmanBay
Description:
Rockweed is a brown algae found on rocky shores. The most common types of rockweed are within the genus Ascophyllum spp. and Fucus spp. (the latter is shown to the left). They grow slowly and can live from 3 to 15 years before breakage. Rockweeds have fronds that bear air bladders. These 'airbags' help the algae to stand up straight under water. Rockweed lacks true roots, stems, and leaves, and because they lack a vascular system, absorb dissolved nutrients directly through the blades. Rockweed attaches to rocks with a disc-like “holdfast”, and regenerate fronds from remaining holdfasts after a natural disturbance that removes upright fronds. [show more]