LISTSERV mailing list manager LISTSERV 16.5

Help for ENVST-L Archives


ENVST-L Archives

ENVST-L Archives


ENVST-L@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU


View:

Message:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Topic:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Author:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

Font:

Proportional Font

LISTSERV Archives

LISTSERV Archives

ENVST-L Home

ENVST-L Home

ENVST-L  September 2001, Week 1

ENVST-L September 2001, Week 1

Subject:

Survey project maps tree death along Appalachian ridges

From:

Karen Claxon <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Karen Claxon <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sat, 1 Sep 2001 17:58:05 -0400

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (230 lines)

http://www.post-gazette.com/healthscience/20010827foresthealth2p2.asp
Survey project maps tree death along Appalachian ridges

Monday, August 27, 2001

By Don Hopey, Post-Gazette Staff Writer







In the Allegheny National Forest's Tionesta Scenic Area, 30 percent to
40 percent of the trees on some slopes are dead or dying.

On Clingman's Dome, a 6,640-foot peak in Great Smoky Mountain National
Park, the mortality rate is closer to 60 percent standing dead.

In the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia, there are so many dead
trees that hikers on the Appalachian Trail are warned by park rangers to
be careful where they pitch their tents because of the risk of injury or
death from brittle falling branches.




------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

   Online Graphic:
How pollution can damage forests


------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------






The big trees on the highest peaks and ridges of the Appalachian
Mountains from Georgia to Maine are dying because of something in the
air.

Acidic pollution from coal-burning power plants, industry and automobile
exhausts is wafting onto the protruding spine of the Appalachians,
poisoning the soil and causing a multitude of species -- maples,
beeches, black cherry, dogwood, hemlocks, spruces and pines -- to die in
epidemic numbers.

"We are seeing serious, AIDS-like mortality in the higher elevation
eastern forests," said Harvard Ayers, a professor of anthropology and
sustainable development at Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C.
"It will take decades, probably centuries, to recover."

Ayers, who as director of the Northern Hardwood Damage Survey has been
mapping the mortality in the Appalachians of North Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia and West Virginia since 1997, was in Franklin, Venango County,
last week to begin survey flights of Pennsylvania, starting with
Allegheny National Forest.

Using topographic maps, global positioning satellite locators and laptop
computers in small planes leased from the Civil Air Patrol, Ayers and
his colleagues have spent hundreds of hours flying over the Appalachian
treetops, plotting and documenting the dead zones.

"The spine of the Blue Ridge is bad off," Ayers said. "It's the highest
in the east and catches most of the wind and pollution.

Ayers said the summit of the Appalachian's highest peak, 6,684-foot
Mount Mitchell in North Carolina's Black Mountain Range, stands
surrounded by the ghostly matchstick remains of spruce and fir trees
that have died in the past 25 years.

Other documented areas of high tree mortality include the Adirondack
Mountains in New York, the Blue Ridge Parkway corridor and Mount Rogers
in southwest Virginia, and parts of the Dolly Sods and Otter Creek
Wilderness areas in West Virginia.

"Throughout the South, any trees above 4,500 feet to 5,000 feet have
been hammered. We're seeing the same kind of problems in West Virginia
above 4,000 feet elevation," Ayers said.

"In the Allegheny National Forest, you've got as bad a problem at 2,000
feet elevation as we see at 5,000 feet in the South. Pennsylvania is at
the epicenter of acidification, so it's certainly understandable that
the Allegheny would be hard hit."

The Appalachian forests at high elevations are vulnerable because they
get more pollution loaded on them and their thinner, ridge-top soils are
less able to overcome its effects.

Pollution-laden westerly winds bring smokestack emissions from the
Midwest and the South, as well as auto exhaust from more local sources.
Up to 60 percent of the pollution load is emitted by coal-burning
electric utilities, with emissions especially high from older power
plants, Ayers said.

As a result, the Smokies, the Shenandoahs, the Blacks and the
Adirondacks, once pristine wooded mountain ranges, now suffer from some
of the highest levels of air pollution in North America.

An October 2000 analysis of air pollution monitoring data at national
parks by Appalachian Voices, a nonprofit conservation organization,
found four of the five most polluted parks are in the East. They are:
Great Smoky Mountains in Tennessee and North Carolina, Shenandoah in
Virginia, Mammoth Cave in Kentucky and Acadia in Maine. The fifth is
Sequoia/Kings Canyon in California.

The pollutants of concern are sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, which
mix with water vapor in the air to form sulfuric and nitric acids that
damage trees and ground in the form of acid rain or acidic mists and
fogs.

North Carolina State University scientists have found frost on Mount
Mitchell with a pH as low as 2.1 -- an acid level between battery acid
and lemon juice.

The acids also fall to Earth in dry form. And nitrogen pollutants also
can react with volatile organic compounds and sunlight to produce
leaf-destroying, ground-level ozone.

"Western Pennsylvania's acid rain deposition is among the worst," Ayers
said, "although there are higher elevations in the Smokies, above 6,000
feet, that get 100 inches of rain a year, and so get more acid rain."

"But with the concentration of power plants around Pittsburgh and to the
west, my God, you can see why the Allegheny National Forest is having
problems."

How damage occurs

How the acids cause stress to trees is only partly understood. In rain,
mist or fog they bathe the tree leaves, weakening leaf structure and
sometimes causing discoloration or premature fall. In the soil, they
generally interfere with plants' ability to absorb nutrients like
calcium, potassium and magnesium.

The acids also can leach poisonous metals like aluminum, cadmium and
mercury from soils, directly damage tree roots, and reduce the number of
microorganisms and even earthworms, which are important to nutrient
cycling and forest regeneration. In some areas, scientists have found
that the soil is so poisoned by acid precipitation that no earthworms
are present.

Disappearing earthworm populations are a good indicator of soil health,
Ayers said. "When they start going out, half of the processors of forest
litter are gone and the trees suffer."

If the trees aren't killed outright by the acid deposition, they can be
weakened enough so that they are more susceptible to damage from cold
winters, high winds, drought, pests and disease.

The U.S. Forest Service and some academics whose research is funded by
coal timber or utility interests have been slow to identify acid
deposition as the culprit for the mortality affecting a wide variety of
tree species, but Ayers said the evidence is overwhelming.

"They say maples are dying of maple thrips and beeches are succumbing to
beech scale disease and one or two other things. Sometimes they say it's
the bugs that are killing them, but those bugs have been around
forever," he said.

"There are a dozen species of trees being hammered all at once, all at
higher altitudes. Air pollution is making everything a whole lot worse.
It's tipping the balance."

View from the air

Bud Miller throttled up the Civil Air Patrol's single-engine Cessna,
rolled it down the runway and eased it into the air with a minimum
amount of wing wobble before banking left over the Allegheny River, the
town of Tionesta and the Tionesta Reservoir on the way to the Allegheny
National Forest.

From our cruising height, 500 feet over the rolling Allegheny Plateau,
the forest looked like a soft green patchwork quilt with squares of
clearcuts and young trees irregularly sewn into the maturing forest.
Dirt roads thread through the trees, linking small stripper oil wells.

As we approached the Tionesta Scenic area, the number of brown and gray
tree crowns in the forest increased dramatically, looking like big, lacy
mushrooms.

"All this on our right is unhealthy forest," said Ron Hancock, a
graduate student in geology at Appalachian State and executive director
of the Project for Appalachian Community and Environment, who is sharing
the plane's backseat with a global positioning device and a laptop
computer.

"I use the GPS to accurately locate where we are on the topographic map
on the computer and then look out the window to identify how much forest
decline there is," he said. "Here, there's an incredible amount of
decline."

The plane turned toward Bradford and passed over the Kinzua Bridge.
Along the ridge near Lewis Run there again are lots of dead trees.

"This isn't as bad as the Tionesta Scenic Area but there are a lot of
gray snags," Hancock said.

In the last area we fly over, near the Kinzua Reservoir, there are a lot
of brown and sickly yellow trees. They look like old broccoli spears
that have been in the veggie drawer too long.

"At Tionesta, we were probably looking at 30 to 40 percent of the trees
if not absolutely dead then in serious decline," Hancock said back on
the ground at the Franklin Airport. "The other areas were maybe 15 to 20
percent dead or dying."

Hancock and Ayers decided to start their mapping of Pennsylvania with
the Allegheny National Forest because it's a large, fairly contiguous
forest. They also plan to fly over the northern tier counties the Laurel
Ridge and Chestnut Ridge.

"What we're after now is to demonstrate the serious northern hardwood
problem from Erie, even new York, down through the Smokies, for a map
we'll be putting together in December," Ayers said. The map and an
accompanying paper will be published by Appalachian Voices.

It will be hard to get a true picture of the problem in the Allegheny
National Forest because it is fragmented by timbering, especially the
cutting of dead and dying tree stands.

"Those cuts are keeping a lot of the mortality from being recognized,"
Ayers said. "We've got to see the bodies to do the body counts, and if
they cut them out, we can't see them."

Top of Message | Previous Page | Permalink

Advanced Options


Options

Log In

Log In

Get Password

Get Password


Search Archives

Search Archives


Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Subscribe or Unsubscribe


Archives

June 2026, Week 1
May 2026, Week 1
April 2026, Week 4
April 2026, Week 1
March 2026, Week 5
March 2026, Week 3
March 2026, Week 1
February 2026, Week 1
January 2026, Week 1
December 2025, Week 2
November 2025, Week 4
November 2025, Week 1
October 2025, Week 1
September 2025, Week 3
August 2025, Week 4
May 2025, Week 3
April 2025, Week 4
March 2025, Week 1
January 2025, Week 1
December 2024, Week 5
November 2024, Week 3
October 2024, Week 1
August 2024, Week 4
July 2024, Week 2
June 2024, Week 1
May 2024, Week 4
April 2024, Week 5
April 2024, Week 4
April 2024, Week 1
March 2024, Week 2
March 2024, Week 1
February 2024, Week 3
January 2024, Week 1
December 2023, Week 1
November 2023, Week 1
October 2023, Week 1
July 2023, Week 5
July 2023, Week 4
July 2023, Week 2
May 2023, Week 5
May 2023, Week 4
May 2023, Week 2
May 2023, Week 1
April 2023, Week 4
April 2023, Week 3
April 2023, Week 2
April 2023, Week 1
March 2023, Week 4
March 2023, Week 3
March 2023, Week 1
February 2023, Week 4
February 2023, Week 2
January 2023, Week 5
January 2023, Week 1
December 2022, Week 1
November 2022, Week 1
October 2022, Week 1
September 2022, Week 4
August 2022, Week 5
August 2022, Week 1
July 2022, Week 4
June 2022, Week 4
May 2022, Week 5
May 2022, Week 1
April 2022, Week 2
April 2022, Week 1
March 2022, Week 5
February 2022, Week 4
February 2022, Week 2
January 2022, Week 5
January 2022, Week 2
December 2021, Week 4
November 2021, Week 5
October 2021, Week 4
September 2021, Week 5
September 2021, Week 2
August 2021, Week 5
August 2021, Week 3
August 2021, Week 2
July 2021, Week 3
June 2021, Week 4
June 2021, Week 1
May 2021, Week 4
May 2021, Week 3
May 2021, Week 1
April 2021, Week 5
April 2021, Week 2
March 2021, Week 3
March 2021, Week 1
February 2021, Week 4
February 2021, Week 3
February 2021, Week 2
February 2021, Week 1
December 2020, Week 4
October 2020, Week 4
October 2020, Week 2
September 2020, Week 4
August 2020, Week 1
July 2020, Week 4
July 2020, Week 3
June 2020, Week 1
May 2020, Week 1
April 2020, Week 1
March 2020, Week 1
February 2020, Week 4
February 2020, Week 3
February 2020, Week 2
February 2020, Week 1
January 2020, Week 5
January 2020, Week 2
November 2019, Week 1
October 2019, Week 3
October 2019, Week 2
September 2019, Week 5
September 2019, Week 3
August 2019, Week 5
August 2019, Week 3
July 2019, Week 5
July 2019, Week 4
July 2019, Week 2
June 2019, Week 1
May 2019, Week 5
May 2019, Week 2
May 2019, Week 1
April 2019, Week 4
April 2019, Week 2
March 2019, Week 4
March 2019, Week 3
March 2019, Week 1
February 2019, Week 4
February 2019, Week 3
January 2019, Week 2
January 2019, Week 1
December 2018, Week 3
November 2018, Week 2
November 2018, Week 1
October 2018, Week 4
September 2018, Week 2
September 2018, Week 1
August 2018, Week 4
August 2018, Week 1
July 2018, Week 4
June 2018, Week 4
June 2018, Week 1
May 2018, Week 4
May 2018, Week 3
May 2018, Week 2
May 2018, Week 1
April 2018, Week 3
April 2018, Week 2
March 2018, Week 5
March 2018, Week 3
March 2018, Week 2
March 2018, Week 1
February 2018, Week 4
February 2018, Week 3
February 2018, Week 1
January 2018, Week 3
December 2017, Week 3
December 2017, Week 2
November 2017, Week 4
November 2017, Week 1
October 2017, Week 4
October 2017, Week 1
September 2017, Week 4
August 2017, Week 1
July 2017, Week 4
July 2017, Week 2
May 2017, Week 4
May 2017, Week 3
May 2017, Week 2
April 2017, Week 4
April 2017, Week 2
March 2017, Week 4
March 2017, Week 3
March 2017, Week 1
February 2017, Week 4
February 2017, Week 3
February 2017, Week 2
February 2017, Week 1
January 2017, Week 4
January 2017, Week 2
December 2016, Week 3
December 2016, Week 2
October 2016, Week 4
October 2016, Week 3
October 2016, Week 1
September 2016, Week 3
September 2016, Week 2
August 2016, Week 1
June 2016, Week 4
June 2016, Week 3
June 2016, Week 1
May 2016, Week 5
May 2016, Week 4
May 2016, Week 3
May 2016, Week 1
April 2016, Week 4
April 2016, Week 2
March 2016, Week 3
March 2016, Week 1
February 2016, Week 3
February 2016, Week 2
February 2016, Week 1
January 2016, Week 4
January 2016, Week 2
January 2016, Week 1
November 2015, Week 1
October 2015, Week 3
October 2015, Week 1
September 2015, Week 4
September 2015, Week 3
August 2015, Week 4
August 2015, Week 3
August 2015, Week 2
August 2015, Week 1
June 2015, Week 5
June 2015, Week 1
May 2015, Week 2
May 2015, Week 1
April 2015, Week 5
March 2015, Week 4
March 2015, Week 2
February 2015, Week 1
October 2014, Week 3
October 2014, Week 2
October 2014, Week 1
September 2014, Week 3
September 2014, Week 2
August 2014, Week 2
July 2014, Week 3
June 2014, Week 5
June 2014, Week 3
April 2014, Week 2
March 2014, Week 4
March 2014, Week 1
February 2014, Week 4
January 2014, Week 4
November 2013, Week 2
October 2013, Week 4
January 2013, Week 4
October 2012, Week 4
August 2012, Week 2
May 2012, Week 5
May 2012, Week 1
February 2012, Week 2
November 2011, Week 3
December 2010, Week 3
December 2010, Week 1
November 2010, Week 1
September 2010, Week 3
March 2010, Week 3
September 2009, Week 2
August 2009, Week 5
July 2009, Week 4
June 2009, Week 5
June 2009, Week 3
June 2009, Week 1
May 2009, Week 4
May 2009, Week 3
April 2009, Week 2
March 2009, Week 3
February 2009, Week 3
November 2008, Week 1
October 2008, Week 5
October 2008, Week 1
August 2008, Week 5
August 2008, Week 4
August 2008, Week 3
August 2008, Week 2
June 2008, Week 3
April 2008, Week 1
March 2008, Week 2
February 2008, Week 1
January 2008, Week 3
December 2007, Week 2
October 2007, Week 5
October 2007, Week 4
August 2007, Week 4
August 2007, Week 3
June 2007, Week 4
June 2007, Week 3
June 2007, Week 2
June 2007, Week 1
May 2007, Week 2
May 2007, Week 1
March 2007, Week 3
March 2007, Week 1
February 2007, Week 3
February 2007, Week 2
February 2007, Week 1
January 2007, Week 5
January 2007, Week 1
December 2006, Week 5
December 2006, Week 4
December 2006, Week 3
December 2006, Week 2
November 2006, Week 4
November 2006, Week 3
November 2006, Week 1
October 2006, Week 4
October 2006, Week 3
September 2006, Week 4
August 2006, Week 3
August 2006, Week 2
August 2006, Week 1
July 2006, Week 2
June 2006, Week 4
June 2006, Week 1
April 2006, Week 4
April 2006, Week 3
April 2006, Week 1
March 2006, Week 4
March 2006, Week 3
March 2006, Week 2
March 2006, Week 1
February 2006, Week 3
February 2006, Week 2
January 2006, Week 3
October 2005, Week 1
August 2005, Week 4
July 2005, Week 5
July 2005, Week 2
February 2005, Week 3
February 2005, Week 2
January 2005, Week 4
December 2004, Week 3
December 2004, Week 1
November 2004, Week 3
November 2004, Week 1
October 2004, Week 3
October 2004, Week 2
October 2004, Week 1
September 2004, Week 4
September 2004, Week 3
September 2004, Week 2
August 2004, Week 5
August 2004, Week 3
August 2004, Week 1
July 2004, Week 5
July 2004, Week 4
July 2004, Week 3
July 2004, Week 2
July 2004, Week 1
June 2004, Week 5
June 2004, Week 4
June 2004, Week 3
June 2004, Week 2
May 2004, Week 4
May 2004, Week 3
May 2004, Week 2
May 2004, Week 1
April 2004, Week 5
April 2004, Week 4
April 2004, Week 3
April 2004, Week 2
April 2004, Week 1
March 2004, Week 5
March 2004, Week 4
March 2004, Week 2
February 2004, Week 5
February 2004, Week 4
February 2004, Week 3
February 2004, Week 2
February 2004, Week 1
January 2004, Week 5
January 2004, Week 4
January 2004, Week 3
January 2004, Week 2
December 2003, Week 4
December 2003, Week 3
December 2003, Week 2
December 2003, Week 1
November 2003, Week 4
November 2003, Week 3
November 2003, Week 2
November 2003, Week 1
October 2003, Week 4
October 2003, Week 3
October 2003, Week 2
October 2003, Week 1
September 2003, Week 5
September 2003, Week 4
September 2003, Week 3
September 2003, Week 2
September 2003, Week 1
August 2003, Week 5
August 2003, Week 4
August 2003, Week 3
August 2003, Week 2
August 2003, Week 1
July 2003, Week 4
July 2003, Week 3
July 2003, Week 2
July 2003, Week 1
June 2003, Week 3
June 2003, Week 1
May 2003, Week 5
May 2003, Week 4
May 2003, Week 3
May 2003, Week 2
May 2003, Week 1
April 2003, Week 4
April 2003, Week 3
April 2003, Week 2
April 2003, Week 1
March 2003, Week 5
March 2003, Week 4
March 2003, Week 3
March 2003, Week 2
March 2003, Week 1
February 2003, Week 4
February 2003, Week 3
February 2003, Week 2
February 2003, Week 1
January 2003, Week 5
January 2003, Week 4
January 2003, Week 3
January 2003, Week 2
January 2003, Week 1
December 2002, Week 5
December 2002, Week 4
December 2002, Week 3
December 2002, Week 2
December 2002, Week 1
November 2002, Week 5
November 2002, Week 4
November 2002, Week 3
November 2002, Week 2
November 2002, Week 1
October 2002, Week 5
October 2002, Week 4
October 2002, Week 3
October 2002, Week 2
October 2002, Week 1
September 2002, Week 5
September 2002, Week 4
September 2002, Week 3
September 2002, Week 2
September 2002, Week 1
August 2002, Week 5
August 2002, Week 4
August 2002, Week 3
August 2002, Week 2
August 2002, Week 1
July 2002, Week 5
July 2002, Week 4
July 2002, Week 3
July 2002, Week 2
July 2002, Week 1
June 2002, Week 5
June 2002, Week 4
June 2002, Week 3
June 2002, Week 2
June 2002, Week 1
May 2002, Week 5
May 2002, Week 4
May 2002, Week 3
May 2002, Week 2
May 2002, Week 1
April 2002, Week 5
April 2002, Week 4
April 2002, Week 3
April 2002, Week 2
April 2002, Week 1
March 2002, Week 5
March 2002, Week 4
March 2002, Week 3
March 2002, Week 2
March 2002, Week 1
February 2002, Week 4
February 2002, Week 3
February 2002, Week 2
February 2002, Week 1
January 2002, Week 5
January 2002, Week 4
January 2002, Week 3
January 2002, Week 2
January 2002, Week 1
December 2001, Week 5
December 2001, Week 4
December 2001, Week 3
December 2001, Week 2
December 2001, Week 1
November 2001, Week 5
November 2001, Week 4
November 2001, Week 3
November 2001, Week 2
November 2001, Week 1
October 2001, Week 5
October 2001, Week 4
October 2001, Week 3
October 2001, Week 2
October 2001, Week 1
September 2001, Week 5
September 2001, Week 4
September 2001, Week 3
September 2001, Week 2
September 2001, Week 1
August 2001, Week 5
August 2001, Week 4
August 2001, Week 3
August 2001, Week 2
August 2001, Week 1
July 2001, Week 5
July 2001, Week 4
July 2001, Week 3
July 2001, Week 2
July 2001, Week 1
June 2001, Week 5
June 2001, Week 4
June 2001, Week 3
June 2001, Week 2
June 2001, Week 1
May 2001, Week 5
May 2001, Week 4
May 2001, Week 3
May 2001, Week 2
May 2001, Week 1
April 2001, Week 5
April 2001, Week 4
April 2001, Week 3
April 2001, Week 2
April 2001, Week 1
March 2001, Week 5
March 2001, Week 4
March 2001, Week 3
March 2001, Week 2
March 2001, Week 1
February 2001, Week 4
February 2001, Week 3
February 2001, Week 2
February 2001, Week 1
January 2001, Week 5
January 2001, Week 4
January 2001, Week 3
January 2001, Week 2
January 2001, Week 1
December 2000, Week 5
December 2000, Week 4
December 2000, Week 3
December 2000, Week 2
December 2000, Week 1
November 2000, Week 5
November 2000, Week 4
November 2000, Week 3
November 2000, Week 2
November 2000, Week 1
October 2000, Week 5
October 2000, Week 4
October 2000, Week 3
October 2000, Week 2
October 2000, Week 1
September 2000, Week 5
September 2000, Week 4
September 2000, Week 3
September 2000, Week 2
September 2000, Week 1
August 2000, Week 5
August 2000, Week 4
August 2000, Week 3
August 2000, Week 2
August 2000, Week 1
July 2000, Week 5
July 2000, Week 4
July 2000, Week 3
July 2000, Week 2
July 2000, Week 1
June 2000, Week 5
June 2000, Week 4
June 2000, Week 3
June 2000, Week 2
June 2000, Week 1
May 2000, Week 5
May 2000, Week 4
May 2000, Week 3
May 2000, Week 2
May 2000, Week 1
April 2000, Week 5
April 2000, Week 4
April 2000, Week 3
April 2000, Week 2
April 2000, Week 1
March 2000, Week 5
March 2000, Week 4
March 2000, Week 3
March 2000, Week 2
March 2000, Week 1
February 2000, Week 5
February 2000, Week 4
February 2000, Week 3
February 2000, Week 2
February 2000, Week 1
January 2000, Week 5
January 2000, Week 4
January 2000, Week 3
January 2000, Week 2
January 2000, Week 1
December 1999, Week 5
December 1999, Week 4
December 1999, Week 3
December 1999, Week 2
December 1999, Week 1
November 1999, Week 5
November 1999, Week 4
November 1999, Week 3
November 1999, Week 2
November 1999, Week 1
October 1999, Week 5
October 1999, Week 4
October 1999, Week 3
October 1999, Week 2
October 1999, Week 1
September 1999, Week 5
September 1999, Week 4
September 1999, Week 3
September 1999, Week 2
September 1999, Week 1
August 1999, Week 5
August 1999, Week 4
August 1999, Week 3
August 1999, Week 2
August 1999, Week 1
July 1999, Week 5
July 1999, Week 4
July 1999, Week 3
July 1999, Week 2
July 1999, Week 1
June 1999, Week 5
June 1999, Week 4
June 1999, Week 3
June 1999, Week 2
June 1999, Week 1
May 1999, Week 5
May 1999, Week 4
May 1999, Week 3
May 1999, Week 2
May 1999, Week 1
April 1999, Week 5
April 1999, Week 4
April 1999, Week 3
April 1999, Week 2
April 1999, Week 1
March 1999, Week 5
March 1999, Week 4
March 1999, Week 3
March 1999, Week 2
March 1999, Week 1
February 1999, Week 5
February 1999, Week 4
February 1999, Week 3
February 1999, Week 2
February 1999, Week 1
January 1999, Week 5
January 1999, Week 4
January 1999, Week 3
January 1999, Week 2
January 1999, Week 1
December 1998, Week 5
December 1998, Week 4
December 1998, Week 3
December 1998, Week 2
December 1998, Week 1
November 1998, Week 5
November 1998, Week 4
November 1998, Week 3
November 1998, Week 2
November 1998, Week 1
October 1998, Week 5
October 1998, Week 4
October 1998, Week 3
October 1998, Week 2
October 1998, Week 1
September 1998, Week 5
September 1998, Week 4
September 1998, Week 3
September 1998, Week 2
September 1998, Week 1
August 1998, Week 5
August 1998, Week 4
August 1998, Week 3
August 1998, Week 2
August 1998, Week 1
July 1998, Week 5
July 1998, Week 4
July 1998, Week 3
July 1998, Week 2
July 1998, Week 1
June 1998, Week 5
June 1998, Week 4
June 1998, Week 3
June 1998, Week 2
June 1998, Week 1
May 1998, Week 5
May 1998, Week 4
May 1998, Week 3
May 1998, Week 2
May 1998, Week 1
April 1998, Week 5
April 1998, Week 4
April 1998, Week 3
April 1998, Week 2
April 1998, Week 1
March 1998, Week 5
March 1998, Week 4
March 1998, Week 3
March 1998, Week 2
March 1998, Week 1
February 1998, Week 5
February 1998, Week 4
February 1998, Week 3
February 1998, Week 2
February 1998, Week 1
January 1998, Week 5
January 1998, Week 4
January 1998, Week 3
January 1998, Week 2
January 1998, Week 1
December 1997, Week 5
December 1997, Week 4
December 1997, Week 3
December 1997, Week 2
December 1997, Week 1
November 1997, Week 5
November 1997, Week 4
November 1997, Week 3
November 1997, Week 2
November 1997, Week 1
October 1997, Week 5
October 1997, Week 4
October 1997, Week 3
October 1997, Week 2
October 1997, Week 1
September 1997, Week 5
September 1997, Week 4
September 1997, Week 3
September 1997, Week 2
December 1996, Week 3
December 1996, Week 2
December 1996, Week 1
November 1996, Week 5
November 1996, Week 4
November 1996, Week 3
November 1996, Week 2
November 1996, Week 1
October 1996, Week 5
October 1996, Week 4
October 1996, Week 3
October 1996, Week 2
October 1996, Week 1
September 1996, Week 5
September 1996, Week 4
September 1996, Week 3
September 1996, Week 2
September 1996, Week 1
August 1996, Week 5
August 1996, Week 4
August 1996, Week 3
August 1996, Week 2
August 1996, Week 1
July 1996, Week 5
July 1996, Week 4
July 1996, Week 3
July 1996, Week 2
July 1996, Week 1
June 1996, Week 5
June 1996, Week 4
June 1996, Week 3
June 1996, Week 2
June 1996, Week 1
May 1996, Week 5
May 1996, Week 4
May 1996, Week 3
May 1996, Week 2
May 1996, Week 1
April 1996, Week 5
April 1996, Week 4
April 1996, Week 3
April 1996, Week 2
April 1996, Week 1
March 1996, Week 5
March 1996, Week 4
March 1996, Week 3
March 1996, Week 2
March 1996, Week 1
February 1996, Week 5
February 1996, Week 4
February 1996, Week 3
February 1996, Week 2
February 1996, Week 1
January 1996, Week 5
January 1996, Week 4
January 1996, Week 3
January 1996, Week 2
January 1996, Week 1

ATOM RSS1 RSS2



LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU

CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager