Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1999, Blaðsíða 44
48
WORKS IN ENGLISH FROM AND ABOUT THE FAROE ISLANDS
AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
141: Christensen, Ole M./Mather, Janice G.:
Morphometric study of a fleld population of the
terrestrial planarian Artioposthia triangulata
(Dendy) in the Faroe Islands
in: Pedobiologia, Jena, vol. 41, 1997, pp. 252-262, 6
figures, references
<A study of A. triangulata at a horticultural site in Tórs-
havn, the Faroes, undertaken in June 1994, which highlights
considerable variation in the size of individuals within a
field population. Cf. bibliography nos. 0323 and 1565>
142: Christensen, Ole M./Mather, Janice G.: The
'New Zealand flatworm', Artioposthia triangulata,
in Europe: the Faroese situation
in: Pedobiologia. Jena, vol. 42, 1998, pp. 532-540, 3
figures, references
<A study (from an OECD workshop on Terrestrial Flat-
worms, New Zealand 1998) of the introduction and "imme-
diate success” of A. triangulata in the Faroes,"... which has
become common and widespread within less than two
decades of the first confirmed sightings.">
143: Christensen, Tyge: Species of the algal genus
Vaucheria on the Faroes
in: Fróðskaparrit, vol. 44, 1996, pp. 79-84, 5 figures,
1 photograph, references
<Results of fieldwork done on Eysturoy, Streymoy,
Suðuroy and Viðoy in July 1994. Manuscript submitted for
publication by Ruth Nielsen>
144: Christiansen, Hanne H.: Highland Aeolian
Deposits in the Faroe Islands
in: Bloch/Enckell (eds.): Environmental Change in
North Atlantic Islands, Tórshavn 1998, pp. 205-213,
5 fxgures, references
<"This paper preliminarily describes the geomorphology of
the Faroese highland aeolian deposits, and discusses the
further use of these deposits in palaeoenvironmental recon-
structions." From abstract>
145: Christiansen, Hans Guldager/Hansen, Erik:
An Island Biogeographicai Analysis of the Flora
of the Faroe Isiands
in: Fróðskaparrit, vol. 46, 1998, pp. 17-32, 4 figures,
3 tables, references
<An enumeration of the number of species found on each of
the 18 larger islands. "The result is much information on the
flora of the individual islands, for example that Skúvoy
floristicly is the most 'Faroese' of all the islands." From ab-
stract>
146: Christiansen, Sofus: Infield-Outfield systems
- characteristics and development in different cli-
matic environments
in: Geografisk Tidsskrift, vol. 77, 1978, pp. 1-5, 5
figures, references, dansk resume
<"The infield-outfield system is defined, and its previous
wide distribution noted. Its characteristics: efficiency, sta-
bility, and development are described. I-o farming is able to
improve farmland by its ion-transfer mechanism. Finally its
present survival in the North Atlantic region is explained by
the system's rationality where altitude and climate restrict
both expansion of infield and possiblilties for ripening ce-
reals">
147: Christianson, Scott R.: Timothy Severin
in: Brothers, Barbara/Gergits, JuliaM. (eds.): British
Travel Writers 1940-1997 (= Dictionary of Literary
Biography, vol. 204). Detroit et al. (The Gale Group)
1999, pp. 255-264
<A biographic sketch of the British explorer and writer of
travelogues (* Sept. 25, 1940). On pp. 259-260 Christian-
son deals with Severin's "Brendan Voyage", which led him
and his companions (among them Faroese artist Tróndur
Patursson) from Ireland via the Faroes, Iceland, Greenland,
to Newfoundland in 1976/77. Cf. also bibliography nos.
2023-25>
148: Cicmanec, John L.: Comparison of four hu-
man studies of perinatal exposure to methylmer-
cury for use in risk assessment
in: Toxicology, vol. 111, 1996, pp. 157-162
<Quoted from Biological Abstracts, 102, 1996, no.
109542>
149: Civil Aviation Administrations (ed.): Wel-
come to Vagar Airport - the airport in the middie
of the blue ocean
n.pl. [Sørvágur], n.d., 11 pp., illustrations
<An outline of the history and present state of the only
Faroese airport>
150: Clark, R.A.: Crust and uppermost mantle
structure of the Iceland-Faroes region from Ray-
leigh wave group velocity dispersion
in: The Geophysical Joumal of the Royal Astronom-
ical Society, vol. 72, 1983, pp. 255-264, 5 figures, 3
tahles, references
<"... The resuli: show that the Iceland-Faroes Ridge has an
anomalous crustal thickness, for oceanic areas, of 20-24 km
..." From abstract>
151: Clarke: Faroes have twice run short of
stamps