The 1989 grounding of the Exxon Valdez in Prince William Sound presented an enormous technical challenge to resource managers in Alaska. Documenting injury to natural resources and fostering their restoration across hundreds of miles of poorly-studied coastline in a scientifically defensible manner were extremely difficult tasks, never before undertaken on such a grand scale.
Now it is possible to locate online much of the research that has been funded by the Trustee Council since the settlement, including annual and final reports for specific projects. If you have technical problems or need assistance locating a specific project report, please contact research staff.
Project Researcher:
Craig, Andrew K.
Number | Project Title | Restoration Category | Fiscal Year |
---|---|---|---|
98191-A1 | Oil-Related Embryo Mortalities | Monitoring | 1998 |
97191-A1 | Injury to Pink Salmon Embryos | Monitoring | 1997 |
96191-A1 | Injury to Pink Salmon Embryos | Monitoring | 1996 |
95191-A1 | Injury to Pink Salmon Embryos | Monitoring | 1995 |
94320-C | SEA: Otolith Thermal Mass Marking | General Restoration | 1994 |
93003 | Injury to Salmon Eggs and Pre-Emergent fry | Research | 1993 |
FS02 | Injury to Salmon Eggs and Preemergent Fry | Damage Assessment | 1992 |
FS02 | Injury to Salmon Eggs and Preemergent Fry | Damage Assessment | 1991 |
FS02 | Injury to Salmon Eggs and Preemergent Fry | Damage Assessment | 1990 |
FS02 | Injury to Salmon Eggs and Preemergent Fry | Damage Assessment | 1989 |