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Showing 446 results for seabirds ...
Road to the Sea Wayside
- Type: Place

The Halfway Creek and Loop Trails are accessible from the Gulf Coast Visitor Center in Everglades City or from the Big Cypress Welcome Center on Sea Grape Drive off of US 41. The Creek is 7.3 miles long from the Big Cypress Welcome Center to the Gulf Coast Visitor Center. The upper loop is an additional 3.7 miles. From the Gulf Coast Visitor Center, the Halfway Creek-Left Hand Turner-Turner River loop is 11 miles. Allow 4-8 hours for these trails.
Sea Level Rise Threatens Cultural Sites in the Everglades
A Deadly Tumor-Causing Disease Joins the List of Perils for Endangered Sea Turtles
Land Ownership: An Effect of the Port Royal Experiment
East Cape Campsite
- Type: Place

This campsite is an open shelly sand beach stretching for several miles along the Gulf of Mexico. Expect expansive sea views as well as magnificent sunsets and sunrises. Ruins of a dock used by an old concession tour may be found here. In the 1830s, Fort Poinsett was located here. Its mission was to thwart suspected arms trading between Indians and Spanish fisherman. Mosquitoes and sandflies may be a problem year round.
Jasper Clarence McCartney
- Type: Person

Jasper McCartney spent most of his life at sea, enlisting in the U.S. Navy in 1930 at age 20. In the 1930s, he served on three destroyers, including the USS West Virginia where he worked as a fireman and watertender. In 1940, McCartney joined the crew of the USS Arkansas and was promoted to chief watertender. He was assigned to the USS Cassin Young a few days after its commissioning in December, 1943. McCartney was killed in action during a kamikaze attack on the destroyer.
- Type: Person

Dr. Benjamin Church Jr., initially a supporter of the American Revolution and the first Surgeon General of the United States, was later exposed as a spy for the British. His involvement in the Revolutionary War is marked by a dramatic shift from being an esteemed physician and political figure to being court-martialed and banished for espionage, ultimately leading to his disappearance at sea.
Battery Langdon
- Type: Article

Born in Georgia in 1839, the son of an Irish-born slaveholder and a black woman, Michael Healy grew up amid the tumult of sectional conflict and civil war. Though he was born enslaved, he would go on to live an accomplished life at sea. At the peak of his career, Healy knew the expanse of the North Pacific and Arctic waters better than anyone.
- Type: Article

Limantour Beach is wide. Bookended by ocean on one side and grassy dunes on the other, its sandy expanse provides a habitat for many organisms that rely on the rich ecosystem between land and sea. The western snowy plover, a small brown and white shorebird, is one species that finds refuge in the sand. Over time, human activity and development have degraded many beaches like Limantour, and biologists have seen those impacts through the eyes of the snowy plovers.
The Graves
Rocky Intertidal Research in the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area
- Type: Article

Along coastlines, where the land meets the sea, is an area known as the intertidal zone -- the region between the lowest low tide and the highest high tide. How do relationships between organisms affect where different species are found, and how important are local environmental conditions in controlling the distributions of species? Drs. Jane Lubchenco and Bruce Menge, two marine ecologists, set out to answer these questions.
- Type: Article

Read a summary and link to a published paper that describes prey selection changes as sea otter populations increase: Leach, C. B., B. P. Weitzman, J. L. Bodkin, D. Esler, G. G. Esslinger, K. A. Kloecker, D. H. Monson, J. N. Womble, and M. B. Hooten. 2024. The dynamics of sea otter prey selection under population growth and expansion. Ecosphere 15(12): e70084.
Ephram Smith
- Type: Person

Ephram Smith, Jr.'s Homestead application # 25026 was recorded on December 11, 1890, in the Register of Land Office by J.H. Bingham. According to his land entry papers, his homestead was located in the SE¼ of NE ¼ of Section 14, S ½ of NW ¼, NE ¼ of SW ¼ of Section 13, Township 3N of Range 20E in Coffee County, AL. His homestead consisted of 138.57 acres. The required filing fee of $13.50 was also recorded on December 11, 1890, at the Receiver’s Office.
Project Profile: Restore Aquatic Passage in Acadia National Park
- Type: Article

The National Park Service (NPS) in collaboration with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, and technical experts will restore passage and critical habitat for fish at up to six culverts and dams in Acadia National Park. These actions will restore critical habitat for some of the last remaining populations of sea-run brook trout, support recreational fishing and visitor experiences, and much more.
Wayside: Inland Sea View
View Black Mountain Overlook
- Type: Place

This scenic overlook on the Blue Ridge Parkway offers views of the Black Mountains as they tower over the surrounding South Toe River valley below. The Black Mountains are the tallest range in the Eastern United States, containing eighteen peaks over 6300 feet above sea level. The breadth of the valley below helps showcase the view of this range. With its western facing aspect and limited light pollution sunsets and stargazing are possible.