Page 309 - James Rodger Fleming - Fixing the sky
P. 309

Cook, William Wallace. The Eighth Wonder: Working for Marvels. New York: Street and
                     Smith, 1907.
                   Cotton, William R. “Weather and Climate Engineering.” In Jost Heintzenberg and Robert J.
                     Charlson, eds., Clouds in the Perturbed Climate System: Their Relationship to Energy Bal-
                     ance, Atmospheric Dynamics, and Precipitation, 339–367. Strugmann Forum Report, vol. 2.
                     Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2009.
                   Croy, Homer. “The Rainmakers.” Harper’s, September 1946, 213–220.
                   Crutzen, Paul J. “Albedo Enhancement by Stratospheric Sulfur Injections: A Contribution
                     to Resolve a Policy Dilemma? An Editorial Essay.” Climatic Change 77 (2006): 211–220.
                   ——. “The Influence of Nitrogen oxides on the Atmospheric ozone Content.” Quarterly
                     Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 96 (1970): 320–325.
                   “Current Notes.” American Meteorological Journal 11 (1894): 192.
                   Curry, J. A., P. J. Webster, and G. J. Holland. “Mixing Politics and Science in Testing the
                     Hypothesis That Greenhouse Warming Is Causing a Global Increase in Hurricane Inten-
                     sity.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 87 (2006): 1025–1036.
                   Curtis, George E. “Rain-Making in Texas.” Nature 44 (1891): 594.
                   Dando, William A. “Budyko, Mikhail Ivanovitch.” In John E. oliver, ed., Encyclopedia of
                     World Climatology, 179–180. Dordrecht: Springer, 2005.
                   Dante Alighieri. The Divine Comedy. 1321. Translated by Henry F. Cary. The Harvard Classics
                     20. New York: Collier, 1909. http://www.literaryaccess.com/20.
                   Dessens, Jean. “Man-made Tornadoes.” Nature 193 (1962): 13–14.
                   Devereaux, W. C. “A Meteorological Service of the Future.” Bulletin of the American Meteoro-
                     logical Society 29 (1939): 212–221.
                   Doel, Ronald E., and Kristine C. Harper. “Prometheus Unleashed: Science as a Diplomatic
                     Weapon in the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration.” Osiris 21 (2006): 66–85.
                   “Donald Duck, Master Rain Maker.” Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories. Poughkeepsie, N.Y.:
                     K. K. Publications [Dell Comics], September, 1953.
                   Doubleday D. C. “Air Force Activities in Cloud Physics Research Program.” March 31, 1948.
                     Records of the Defense Research and Development Board, National Archives.
                   Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan. A Study in Scarlet. 1887; New York: Penguin, 2001.
                   Droessler, Earl G. Federal Government Activities in Weather Modification and Related Cloud
                     Physics. Final Report of the United States Advisory Committee on Weather Control. Vol.
                     2. Howard T. orville, chairman. Washington, D.C., 1957.
                   Dyer, Gwynne. Climate Wars. Toronto: Random House Canada, 2008.
                   Dyrenforth, Robert St. George. Report of the Agent of the Department of Agriculture for Mak-
                     ing Experiments in the Production of Rainfall. U.S. Senate, Ex. Doc. 45, 52nd Cong., 1st
                     sess., 1892.
                   Dyson, Freeman J. “Can We Control the Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere?” Energy 2
                     (1977): 287–291.
                   Dyson, Freeman J., and Gregg Marland. “Technical Fixes for the Climatic Effects of Co ”
                                                                                2.
                     In W. P. Elliott and Lester Machta, eds., Workshop on the Global Effects of Carbon Dioxide
                     from Fossil Fuels, 111–118. Rep. CoNF-770385. Washington D.C.: Department of Energy,
                     1979.




           292  |  biblioGraPHy
   304   305   306   307   308   309   310   311   312   313   314