Non-Internet References


1.) Aqua Heat Incorporation, Inc. 1994. Vegetation control system. Aqua Heat Pamphlet.


2.) Anderson, I. Supergrass sets alarm bells ringing. New Scientist 151:6.


3.) Brackett, R. E. 1991. How pesticides benefit consumers. American Vegetable Grower 39(1):38-39.


4.) Breeze V., G. Thomas and R. Butler. 1992. Use of a model and toxicity data to predict the risks of some wild plant species from drift of four herbicides. Annals of Applied Biology 121:669-677.


5.) Burgard, L. S. March 1996. The next generation of weed control. American Fruit Grower 116:10-11.


6.) Clark, B. 1991. How pesticides benefit consumers. American Vegetable Grower 39(1):38-39.


7.) Maizlish N., L. Rudolph, and K. Dervin. 1995. The surveillance of work-related pesticide illness: an application of the Sentinel Event Notification System for Occupational Risks (SENSOR). American Journal of Public Health 85(6):811.


8.) Marini, R. October 22, 1997. Personal interview (Temperate Fruits Associate Editor of HortScience, Professor in the Virginia Tech Horticulture Department).


9.) Schupp, J. R., and J. J. McCue. 1996. Effect of five weed control methods on growth and fruiting of 'McIntosh'/M.7 apple trees. Journal of Tree Fruit Production 1(1):1-14.


10.) Tomlin, C. 1994. A World Compendium: The Pesticide Manual Incorporating the Agrochemicals Handbook, Tenth Edition. Crop Protection Publications. 956-957.


11.) United States Environmental Protection Agency. 1988. Pesticide Fact Handbook. Noyes Data Corporation, Park Ridge, NJ. 324-328, 596-605, 703-707.


12.) Wrubel, R. 1994. The promise and problems of herbicide-resistant crops. Technology Review 97(3):56-61.