SITE FORMATION AND CORROSION PROCESSES: A Comparative Analysis of Condor and Stormy Petrel Wreck Sites
Author
Alexander, Hoyt L.
Abstract
Submerged cultural resources abound in North Carolina waters, and two Civil War blockade runners built, launched, and sunk within months of each other provide an opportunity to review site formation processes through a multi-disciplinary lens. The incorporation of historical, electrochemical, meteorological, geographic information science, and structured query language methods provides a more comprehensive understanding of the processes affecting Condor and Stormy Petrel. This knowledge can be used to inform management decisions regarding the preservation of valuable cultural resources and the longevity of those resources.
Subject
Date
2019-04-17
Citation:
APA:
Alexander, Hoyt L..
(April 2019).
SITE FORMATION AND CORROSION PROCESSES: A Comparative Analysis of Condor and Stormy Petrel Wreck Sites
(Master's Thesis, East Carolina University). Retrieved from the Scholarship.
(http://hdl.handle.net/10342/7248.)
MLA:
Alexander, Hoyt L..
SITE FORMATION AND CORROSION PROCESSES: A Comparative Analysis of Condor and Stormy Petrel Wreck Sites.
Master's Thesis. East Carolina University,
April 2019. The Scholarship.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/7248.
September 27, 2023.
Chicago:
Alexander, Hoyt L.,
“SITE FORMATION AND CORROSION PROCESSES: A Comparative Analysis of Condor and Stormy Petrel Wreck Sites”
(Master's Thesis., East Carolina University,
April 2019).
AMA:
Alexander, Hoyt L..
SITE FORMATION AND CORROSION PROCESSES: A Comparative Analysis of Condor and Stormy Petrel Wreck Sites
[Master's Thesis]. Greenville, NC: East Carolina University;
April 2019.
Collections
Publisher
East Carolina University