Ager, D.V.1973: The nature of the stratigraphical record. New York: Halsted Press. 1974: Storm deposits in the Jurassic of the Moroccan High Atlas . Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology15, 83-93.
2.
Albritton, C.C.1967: Uniformity the ambiguous principle. Geological Society of America Special Paper 89, 1-2.
3.
Anderson, M.G. and Calver, A.1977: On the persistence of landscape features formed by a large flood. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers , new series 2, 243-54.
4.
Bacon, Francis, Lord Verulam1605: Advancement of learning. 1915: Kitchin, G. W., editor, London: Dent.
5.
Bailey, J.F.O., Patterson, J.L. and Paulhus, J.H.L.1975: HurricaneAgnes rainfall and floods, June-July 1972. United States Geological Survey , Professional Paper 924.
6.
Baker, B.H. and Mitchell, J.G.1976: Volcanic stratigraphy and geochronology of the Kedong-Olorgesaile area and the evolution of the South Kenya rift valley. Journal of the Geological Society of London132, 467-84.
7.
Baker, V.R.1971: Paleohydrology of catastrophic Pleistocene flooding in eastern Washington. Geological Society of America, Abstracts3, 497.
8.
1973 : Paleohydrology and sedimentology of Lake Missoula flooding in eastern Washington. Geological Society of America, Special Paper 114.
9.
1974 : Erosional forms and processes for the catastrophic Pleistocene Missoula floods in eastern Washington. In Morisawa, M., editor, Fluvial geomorphology, Binghamton: State University of New York Press, 123-48.
10.
1977: Morphology of the Martian outflow channels. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9 (7), 887.
11.
Ball, S.M.1971: The Westphalia Limestone of the northern midcontinent: a possible ancient storm deposit. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology41, 217-232.
12.
Barbour, I. G., editor, 1973: Western man and environmental ethics. Reading, Massachusetts : Addison-Wesley.
13.
Bartlein, P.J.1979: The influence of short-period climatic variation on streamflow in the United States and southern Canada. University of Wisconsin-Madison, PhD dissertation.
14.
Bell, B.1972: Research directed toward the observation and interpretation of solar phenomena. Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories , Final Report, Project no. 7649.
15.
Bennett, H.H.1939: Soil conservation. New York : McGraw-Hill.
16.
Bennett, H.H. and Chapline, W.R.1928: Soil erosion as a natural menace. United States Department of Agriculture, Circular33.
17.
Bolt, B.A., Horn, W.L., Macdonald, G.A. and Scott, R.F.1975: Geological hazards. New York : Springer-Verlag.
18.
Bottjer, D.J.1976: Storm depostional features in the Janesville Member of the Manlius Formation (Lower Devonian), western New York. Geological Society of America, North-Central Section, Abstracts, 10th Annual Meeting, 466.
19.
Bremner, R.L. and Davies, D.K.1973: Storm-generated coquinoid sandstone: genesis of high-energy marine sediments from the Upper Jurassic of Wyoming and Montana . Geological Society of America Bulletin84, 1685-98.
20.
Bretz, J.H.1923: The channeled scablands of the Columbia Plateau . Journal of Geology, 31, 617-49.
21.
1924: The Dalles type of river channel. Journal of Geology32, 139-49.
22.
1927: Channeled scabland and the Spokane Flood. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences17, 200-201.
23.
1928: The channeled scabland of eastern Washington. Geographical Review18, 446-77.
24.
1932 : The Grand Coulee. American Geographical Society Special Publication.
25.
1933: The channeled scabland. XVI International Geological Congress Guidebook22, Excursion C-2.
26.
1959: Washington's channeled scabland. WashingtonDepartment of Conservation, Division of Mines and Geology, Bulletin45.
27.
1969: The Lake Missoula floods and the channeled scabland. Journal of Geology77, 505-543.
28.
Bretz, J.H., Smith, H.T.U. and Neff, G.E.1956: Channeled scabland of Washington-new data and interpretations . Geological Society of America Bulletin67, 957-1049.
29.
Brown, B.W.1974: Induction, deduction, and irrationality in geologic reasoning . Geology2, 456.
30.
Budyko, M.I.1969: The effect of solar radiation variations on the climate of the earth. Tellus21, 611-19.
31.
Burton, I.1962: Types of agricultural occupance of flood plains in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography.
32.
Campbell, R. R. and Wade, J. L., editors, 1972: Society and environment: the coming collision. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
33.
Carson, R.L.1962: Silent spring. New York: Houghton.
34.
Christofoletti, A.1976: Geografia dos eventos catastroficos. Boletim de Geografia Teoretica6, 81-92.
35.
Chu, C.1973: A preliminary study of the climatic fluctuations during the last 5000 years in China. Scientia Sinica16, 226-56.
36.
Coleman, P.J.1968: Tsunamis as geological agents. Journal of the Geological Society of Australia15, 267-73.
37.
Coope, G.R.1976: Fossil evidence that, twice with the last fifty thousand years, temperate climates were suddenly replaced by arctic conditions in western Europe. Geological Society of America, Abstracts8(6), 33-49.
38.
Crandell, D.R.1971. Post-glacial lahars from the Mount Rainier Volcano , Washington. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 677.
39.
Dacy, D.C., and Kunreuther, H.1969: The economics of natural disasters. New York: Free Press.
40.
Dalrymple, T.1950: Surface drainage research. In Highway Research Board, Report 11-B, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 4-20.
41.
Dury, G.H.1975: Neocatastrophism?Anais da Academia de Ciencias do Brasil47 (suplemento), 135-51.
42.
1976: Discharge prediction, present and former, from channel dimensions. Journal of Hydrology30, 219-245.
43.
1977 : Peak flows, low flows, and aspects of geomorphic dominance . In Gregory, K. R., editor, River channel changes, Chichester: Wiley.
44.
1980: Step-functional changes in precipitation at Sydney, New South Wales. Australian Geographical Studies18, 62-78.
45.
in preparation: Climate and settlement in late-medieval central England. To appear in Proceedings of the Norwich International Conference on Climate and History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
46.
Dzerdzeevskii, B.L.1962: Fluctuations of climate and of general circulation of the atmosphere in extra-tropical latitudes of the northern hemisphere and some problems, of dynamic climatology. Tellus14, 328-36.
47.
1963 : Fluctuations of general circulation of the atmosphere and climate in the twentieth century. UNESCO Arid Zone Research20, 285-93.
48.
1966: Some aspects of dynamic climatology. Tellus18, 751-60.
49.
1969 : Climatic epochs in the twentieth century and some comments on the analysis of past climates. In Wright, H. E. Jr, editor, Quaternary geology and climate, Proceedings of the VII INQUA Congress, 16, Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences.
50.
Eckholm, E.P.1976: Losing ground. New York: Norton.
51.
Einarsson, T., Kjartansson, G. and Thorarinnson, S.1967: The eruption of Hekla 1947-48 . I. Rejkjavik: H. F. Leiftur.
52.
Farrar, T. E., editor, 1976: The urban costs of climatic modification. New York: Wiley.
53.
Farvar, M. T. and Milton, J. P., editors, 1972: The careless technology . Garden City: Natural History Press .
54.
Foster, H.D.1976: Assessing disaster magnitude: a social science approach . The Professional Geographer28, 241-47.
55.
Gerasimov, I.P. and Zvonkova, T.B.1974: Natural hazards in the territory of the USSR. In White, G. F., 1974b.
56.
Goldthwait, R.P.1977: Advance and retreat rates of the last ise in the Ohio region by radiocarbon. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 993-94.
57.
Gould, S.J.1965: Is uniformitarianism necessary?American Journal of Science262, 223-28.
58.
Graf, W.L.1979: Catastrophe theory as a model for change in fluvial systems . In Rhodes, D. D. and Williams, G. P., editors, Adjustments of the fluvial system, Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt .
59.
Gregor, A.S.1974: Man's mark on the land. New York: Scribner.
60.
Gretetner, P.E.1967: Significance of the rare event in geology. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists51, 2197-2206.
61.
Gumbel, E.J.1941: The return period of flood flows. Annals of Mathematical Statistics12, 163-90.
62.
1942: On the frequency distribution of extreme values. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society25, 95-105.
63.
1945: Floods estimated by the probability method. Engineering News-Record, June issue.
64.
1958 : Statistical theory of floods and droughts. Proceedings of the Institute of Water Engineers 12, 157-84.
65.
Hall, S.A.1977: Late Quaternary sedimentation and paleoecologic history of Chico Canyon, New Mexico. Geological Society of America Bulletin88, 1593-1618.
66.
Hardin, S.1974: Living on a lifeboat. Bioscience24, 561-68.
67.
Holeman, J.H.1968: The sediment yield of the major rivers of the world . Water Resources Research4, 737-47.
68.
Holmes, R.C.1961: Composition and size of flood losses. In White, G. F., 1961.
69.
Hooykaas, R.1959: Natural law and divine miracle. Leiden : E. J. Brill.
70.
1971 : Catastrophism in geology. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company.
71.
Horne, J.C., Staub, J.R., Howell, D.J. and Baganz, B.P.1977: Partings: origins and their significance in coal mining . Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 1025-1026.
72.
Hsü, K.J.1975: Catastrophic debris streams (sturtzstroms) generated by rockfalls. Geological Society of America Bulletin86, 129-40.
73.
Jacks, J.V. and Whyte, R.O.1939: Vanishing lands, a world survey of soil erosion . New York: Doubleday.
74.
Johnson, W. A. and Hardesty, J., editors, 1971: Economic growth vs the environment . Belmont, California: Wadsworth .
75.
Judson, S.1973: Erosion of the land. In Tank, R. W., editor, Focus on environmental geology, New York: Oxford University Press.
76.
Kalnicky, R.A.1974: Climatic change since 1950. Annals of the Association of American Geographers64, 100-112.
77.
1975 : Atmospheric circulation singularities in the northern hemisphere . University of Wisconsin-Madison, unpublished PhD dissertation.
78.
Kates, R.W.1962: Hazard and choice perception in flood plain management . Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography.
79.
Kates, R.W. and White, G.F.1961: Flood hazard evaluation. In White, G. F., 1961.
80.
Knox, J.C.1972: Valley alluviation in southwestern Wisconsin. Annals of the Association of American Geographers62, 401-410.
81.
1977 : The response of floods and sediment yields to climate variation in the upper Mississippi Valley. Geological Society of America, North-Central Section, Abstracts, 11th Annual Meeting, 614-15.
82.
Knox, J.C., Bartlein, P.J., Hirschboek, K.K. and Muckenhirn, R.J. - 1975: The response of floods and sediment yields to climate variation and land use in the upper Mississippi valley. Madison: University of Wisconsin-Madison, Institute for Environmental Studies, Report 52.
83.
Lamb, H.H.1976: Understanding climatic change and its relevance to the world food problem. Norwich: University of East Anglia, School of Environmental Sciences, Climatic Research Unit, Report RP5.
84.
Leopold, A.1949: A Sand County almanac. New York : Ballantine.
85.
Leopold, L.B., Wolman, M.G. and Miller, J.P.1964: Fluvial processes in geomorphology. San Franscisco: Freeman.
86.
Lucchitta, B.K.1977: Landslides on Mars. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 1077.
87.
1978: A large landslide on Mars. Geological Society of America Bulletin89, 1601-09.
88.
Macintyre, A. and Ruddiman, W.F.1976: Rate-of-change of North Atlantic surface water configuration: a monitor of glacial onset. Geological Society of America, Abstracts8(6), 1005-06.
89.
Malde, H.E.1968: The catastrophic Late Pleistocene Bonneville flood in the Snake River Plain, Idaho. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 596.
90.
Marsh, G.P.1864: The earth as modified by human action. New York: Scribner.
91.
Martin, P.S.1967: Prehistoric overkill. In Martin, P. S. and Wright, H. E., 1967.
92.
Martin, P. S. and Wright, H. E., editors, 1967: Pleistocene extinctions . New Haven: Yale University Press .
93.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970 : Man's impact on the global environment. Report of the study of critical environmental problems (SCEP). Cambridge, Massachusetts : Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.
94.
1971 : Inadvertent climatic modification. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.
95.
Meadows, D.H., Meadows, D.L., Randers, J. and Beherns, W.W. III1972: Limits to growth. Washington, DC: New American Library.
96.
Mesarovic, M. and Pestel, E.1974: Mankind at the turning point. New York : Dutton.
97.
Mosimann, J.E. and Martin, P.S.1975: Simulating overkill by paleoindians. American Scientist63, 304-313.
98.
Murphy, F.C.1958: Regulating flood-plain development. Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography .
99.
Murton, B.J. and Shimbabukur, S.1974: Human adjustment to volcanic hazard in Pune District, Hawaii. In White, G. F., 1974.
100.
Namias, J.1945: Investigation of polar anticyclogenesis and associated variations of the solar index. United States Department of Commerce, Weather Bureau Research Paper 24.
101.
1950: The index cycle and its role in the general circulation . Journal of Meteorology7, 130-39.
1972: Experiments in objectively predicting some atmospheric and oceanic variables for the winter of 1971-72. Journal of Applied Meteorology11, 1164-74.
104.
Namias, J. and Born, R.M.1972: Empirical techniques applied to large-scale and long-period air-sea interactions, a preliminary experiment. San Diego : University of California, Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
105.
Nelson, H. and Thorn, D.R.1977: Environmental geologic hazards in Nortan Basin, Bering Sea. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 1111.
106.
Newell, N.D.1967: Revolutions in the history of life. In Albritton, C. C., editor, Geological Society of America, Special Paper 89.
107.
O'Riordan, T.1974: The New Zealand natural hazard insurance scheme: application to North America. In White, G. F., 1974.
108.
Paddock, W. and Paddock, P.1967: Famine 1975!New York: Little
109.
Pain, C.F. and Blowler, J.M.1973: Denudation following the 1970 earthquake at Padang, New Guinea. Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie NF Supplementband18, 92-104.
110.
Pardee, J.T.1910: The glacial Lake Missoula. Journal of Geology18, 376-86.
111.
1942: Unusual currents in glacial Lake Missoula. Geological Society of America Bulletin53, 1569-99.
112.
Sallenger, A.H. and Hunter, R.E.1977: Coastal effects of a major storm in the northern Bering Sea. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 1152-53.
113.
Scheidegger, A.E.1975: Physical aspects of natural catastrophes. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
114.
Schindewolf, O.H.1962: Neokatastrophismus? Deutsche Geologische Gesellschaft, BerlinZeitschrift114, 430-45.
115.
Selby, M.J.1974: Dominant geomorphic events in landform evolution. International Association of EngineeringBulletin9, 85-89.
116.
Sherlock, R.L.1922: Man as a geological agent. London: Witherby.
117.
Starkel, L.1972a: The role of catastrophic rainfall in the shaping of relief in the lower Himalaya (Darjeeling Hills). Geographia Polonica21, 103-47.
118.
1972b: The modelling of monsoon areas of India as related to catastrophic rainfall. Geographical Polonica23, 151-73.
119.
1976 : The role of extreme (catastrophic) meteorological events in contemporary evolution of slopes. In Derbyshire, E., editor, Geomorphology and climate, Chichester: Wiley.
120.
Stevens, C.H.1977: Was development of brackish oceans a factor in Permian extinctions?Geological Society of America Bulletin88, 133-38.
121.
Thomas, W. L., editor, 1956: Man's role in changing the face of the earth. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
122.
Urey, H.C.1973: Cometary collisions and geological periods. Nature242, 32-33.
123.
Wagstaff, J.M.1976: Some thoughts about geography and catastrophe theory . Area8, 316-20.
124.
Walling, D.E.1977: Natural sheet and channel erosion of unconsolidated source material (geomorphic control, magnitude and frequency of transfer mechanisms) . In International Joint Great Lakes Commission, Pollution from Land Use Activities Research Group, The fluvial transport of sediment-associated nutrients and contaminants, Kitchener (Ontario) Conference Proceedings.
125.
Weis, P.L.1977: Large-scale erosional and depositional features of the Spokane Flood. Geological Society of America, Abstracts9(7), 1220.
126.
White, G.F.1942: Human adjustment to floods: a geographical approach to the flood problem in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography.
127.
1961 : Papers on flood problems. Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Geography.
128.
1963 : Choice of adjustment to floods. Chicago : University of Chicago, Department of Geography.
129.
1974 a: Natural hazards research: concepts, methods, and policy implications . In Chorley, R. J., editor, Directions in geography, London: Methuen.
130.
1974 b: Natural hazards. New York: Oxford University Press.
131.
Wolman, M.G. and Gerson, R.1978: Relative scales of time and effectiveness of climate in watershed geomorphology. Earth Surface Processes3, 189-208.
132.
Wolman, M.G. and Miller, J.P.1960: Magnitude and frequency of geomorphic processes . Journal of Geology68, 54-74.