Dale Griffin, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 87
Dust in the wind: long range transport of dust in the atmosphere and its implications for global public and ecosystem health
Movement of soil particles in atmospheres is a normal planetary process. Images of Martian dust devils (wind-spouts) and dust storms captured by NASA's Pathfinder have demonstrated the significant role that storm activity plays in creating the red atmospheric haze of Mars. On Earth, desert soils moving in the atmosphere are responsible for the orange hues in brilliant sunrises and...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, Christina A. Kellogg, Eugene A. Shinn
African desert dust in the Caribbean atmosphere: Microbiology and public health
Air samples collected on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands were screened for the presence of viable bacteria and fungi to determine if the number of cultivatable microbes in the atmosphere differed between "clear atmospheric conditions" and "African dust-events." Results indicate that during "African dust-events," the numbers of cultivatable airborne microorganisms can be 2 to 3 times...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, V.H. Garrison, J.R. Herman, E.A. Shinn
Rapid movement of wastewater from on-site disposal systems into surface waters in the lower Florida Keys
Viral tracer studies have been used previously to study the potential for wastewater contamination of surface marine waters in the Upper and Middle Florida Keys. Two bacteriophages, the marine bacteriophage ϕHSIC and the Salmonella phage PRD1, were used as tracers in injection well and septic tank studies in Saddlebunch Keys of the Lower Florida Keys and in septic tank studies in Boot...
Authors
John H. Paul, Molly R. McLaughlin, Dale W. Griffin, Erin K. Lipp, Rodger Stokes, Joan B. Rose
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 87
Dust in the wind: long range transport of dust in the atmosphere and its implications for global public and ecosystem health
Movement of soil particles in atmospheres is a normal planetary process. Images of Martian dust devils (wind-spouts) and dust storms captured by NASA's Pathfinder have demonstrated the significant role that storm activity plays in creating the red atmospheric haze of Mars. On Earth, desert soils moving in the atmosphere are responsible for the orange hues in brilliant sunrises and...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, Christina A. Kellogg, Eugene A. Shinn
African desert dust in the Caribbean atmosphere: Microbiology and public health
Air samples collected on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands were screened for the presence of viable bacteria and fungi to determine if the number of cultivatable microbes in the atmosphere differed between "clear atmospheric conditions" and "African dust-events." Results indicate that during "African dust-events," the numbers of cultivatable airborne microorganisms can be 2 to 3 times...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, V.H. Garrison, J.R. Herman, E.A. Shinn
Rapid movement of wastewater from on-site disposal systems into surface waters in the lower Florida Keys
Viral tracer studies have been used previously to study the potential for wastewater contamination of surface marine waters in the Upper and Middle Florida Keys. Two bacteriophages, the marine bacteriophage ϕHSIC and the Salmonella phage PRD1, were used as tracers in injection well and septic tank studies in Saddlebunch Keys of the Lower Florida Keys and in septic tank studies in Boot...
Authors
John H. Paul, Molly R. McLaughlin, Dale W. Griffin, Erin K. Lipp, Rodger Stokes, Joan B. Rose