Catalog Record: Residential street-dirt accumulation rates and chemical composition, and removal efficiencies by mechanical- and vacuum-type sweepers, New Bedford, Massachusetts, 2003-04 | Hathi Trust Digital Library

Navigation


Residential street-dirt accumulation rates and chemical composition, and removal efficiencies by mechanical- and vacuum-type sweepers, New Bedford, Massachusetts, 2003-04 / by Robert F. Breault, Kirk P. Smith, and Jason R. Sorenson.

Main Author: Breault, Robert F.
Other Authors: Smith, Kirk P. , Sorenson, Jason R.
Language(s): English
Published: Reston, Va. : U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey ; 2005.
Series: Scientific investigations report ;
Subjects: Urban runoff > Environmental aspects > Massachusetts > New Bedford.
Trace elements > Environmental aspects > Massachusetts > New Bedford.
Street cleaning > Massachusetts > New Bedford > Evaluation.
Cleaning machinery and appliances > Massachusetts > New Bedford > Evaluation.
Water quality management > Massachusetts > New Bedford.
Note: Shipping list no.: 2006-0112-P.
Physical Description: v, 27 p. : ill. (some col.), map ; 28 cm.
Original Format: Book
Original Classification Number: QE 1 .S264 2005-5184
Locate a Print Version: Find in a library
Search

Catalog Search
Bibliographic search (Title, Author, Subject, ISBN/ISSN, Publisher, Series Title, or Year of Publication) of all HathiTrust items

Experimental Search
Full-text search of a small subset of HathiTrust items

Build & View Custom Collections

Go to Public Collections to browse other people's collections. Items from these collections can be copied into your own private collection.

Create your own Private Collection by searching or browsing to find items of interest and then adding them to a collection.

Full-text searching is available within public or private collections, and within individual items.

Close

Search Tips

Phrase Searching

Use quotes to search an exact phrase: e.g. "occult fiction"

Wildcards

Use * or ? to search for alternate forms of a word. Use * to stand for several characters, and ? for a single character: e.g. optim* will find optimal, optimize or optimum; wom?n will find woman and women.

Boolean Searching

Use AND and OR between words to combine them with Boolean logic: e.g. (heart OR cardiac) AND surgery will find items about heart surgery or cardiac surgery. Boolean terms must be in uppercase.

Close