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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Burton, Bill. "Cold Fish, Ice Fish." Chesapeake Bay Magazine 23 (December 1993): 16, 38.

Burton, Bill. "Desperately Seeking Chessie." Chesapeake Bay Magazine 24 (January 1995): 30-32.

Burton, Bill. "Fishy Politics." Chesapeake Bay Magazine 24 (November 1994): 26, 28, 80.

Cameron, Mark. "Monuments of Urbanity: The Development of Baltimore's Residential Squares." Maryland Humanities (Winter 1998): 5.

Campbell, Chris. "Last Stand." Baltimore 88 (November 1995): 74-77.
Categories: Environment

Canby, Tom. "The Great Blizzard of 1899." Legacy 19 (Winter 1999): 1, 3.
Categories: Environment

"Canoeing on the Casselman River." Glades Star 8 (September 1996): 85.

Capper, John, Garrett Power, and Frank Shivers. Chesapeake Waters: Pollution, Public Health and Public Opinion, 1602-1972. Centreville, MD: Tidewater Publishers, 1983.

Carter, Virginia, Patricia T. Gammon, and Nancy C. Bartow. Submersed Aquatic Plants of the Tidal Potomac River. [Reston, VA?]: United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1983.

Chappell, Helen. "The Great Dorchester Marsh." Maryland 25 (December 1993): 14-17.

Chesapeake Research Consortium. The Effects of Tropical Storm Agnes on the Chesapeake Bay Estuarine System. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1977.

Clayton, John Edmund, and Dorothy Berkeley, eds. "Another Account of Virginia." The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 76 (1687): 415-436.
Notes: This is a convenient abstract of Clayton's Virginia descriptions, equally applicable to Maryland, discussing a wide variety of animals and plants, their uses and special characters. The Reverend Clayton wrote considerably more.

Colbert, Ed, and Judy Colbert. "Battle Creek Cypress Swamp." Maryland 21(Summer 1989): 72-73.

"Coldest Winter in 200 Years." Glades Star 6 (March 1991): 518-20.

Cowles, R.P. "A Biological Study of the Offshore Waters of Chesapeake Bay." Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Fisheries 46 (1930): 277-381.
Notes: Cowles and his predecessor Lewis Radcliffe were the first to do coordinated studies of the hydrography and biology of the Bay, from 1915 to 1922. The kinds of organisms they found suggest the Bay was not yet experiencing the chronic summer loss of deep water dissolved oxygen encountered in today's polluted estuary.

Cronin, William B. Volumetric, Areal and Tidal Statistics of the Chesapeake Bay Estuary and its Tributaries. Special Report 20, Ref.71-2.Chesapeake Bay Institute, 1971.

Cronin, William B. The Chesapeake's Vanishing Islands. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, in press.
Notes: With sea level rise and shoreline erosion one of the most evident natural processes in the Chesapeake. Cronin, an oceanographer, provides a detailed account of virtually every island in the Bay.

Cronon, William B. Changes in the Land, Indians, Colonists and the Ecology of New England. New York: Hill and Wang, 1983.
Notes: Cronon's work is about New England, but his ecological insights are invaluable to learning about the Chesapeake.

Dare, Charles P. "Wild Fowl of the Chesapeake." History Trails 18 (Summer 1984): 13-16.

Davidson, Heather R. "Heading for a Happy Ending." Maryland 23 (Spring 1991): 54-56.
Categories: Environment

Davidson, Heather R. "The Importance of Maryland Ponds." Maryland 26 (April 1994): 24-29.

Davidson, Heather R., and Skip Willits. "Campaign for the Chesapeake Rivers." Maryland 26 (September/October 1994): 17-24.

Davidson, Steven G., Jay. G. Merwin, Jr., John Capper, Garrett Power, and Frank Shivers, Jr. Chesapeake Waters: Four Centuries of Controversy, Concern and Legislation. 1983; reprint, Centreville, MD: Tidewater Publishers, 1997.
Notes: Primarily on the political process paralleling environmental change but containing many references to contemporary conditions and problems.

Davis, Clayton. "Back to Nature." Maryland 28 (January 1996): 23.
Categories: Environment

Davis, Lynn. "Garden Roots." Heartland of Del-Mar-Va 11 (Sunshine 1988): 154-67.

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