Central Oregon grew by 30.5 percent during the decade — the fastest growth rate of any region of the state. By 2010, about 5.2 percent of Oregon residents, or just over 200,000 people, lived in the area composed of Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties (Table 1). The three-county ...
Lowest Rate Guarantee Experience the Magic of Central Oregon In the Charming Western Town of Sisters Centrally located in Oregon, this Sisters hotel offers friendly and attentive service, gorgeous old growth Ponderosa Pine trees and lots of wildlife, including alpacas, deer and over 48 species of ...
Oregon Health and Science University/Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, OR, USA Devon Kelly & Rosemary Makar Medical University of Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland Jacek Jassem & Wojciech Biernat Military Institute of Medicine, Warsaw, Poland Renata Duchnowska Oncology Center, Opole, Poland Barbara Radecka Tok...
3 College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, 104 CEOAS Administration Building, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-5503, USA. w Present address: U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. Correspondence and requests for materials should ...
, Ritual and Symbol in Native South America, Anthropological Papers 9, University of Oregon, Eugene, pp. 1–20. Google Scholar Linares, O. F. (1976). From the late preceramic to the Early Formative in the intermediate area: Some issues and methodologies. In Robinson, L. S. (ed.), ...
Modeling stem taper of three central Oregon species using nonlinear mixed effects models and autoregressive error structures For. Ecol. Manag., 179 (2003), pp. 507-522, 10.1016/S0378-1127(02)00528-5 View PDFView articleView in ScopusGoogle Scholar García, 2015 O. García Dynamic modeling of...
the loss of erosion-rate cyclicity may have resulted from a change in precipitation conditions associated with the continued growth of the Eastern Cordillera, eventually concentrating precipitation along the eastern range front as the orographic barrier became more pronounced. This explanation is supported...
Mule deer have been declining in southcentral Oregon for at least 30 years (Salwasser, 1979). The finite rate of decline was determined by Peek et al. (1999) to be at the rate of −0.0921 per year. Causes for the decline were identified by Salwasser (1979) as low-quality diet duri...
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, 97239-3098, Portland, OR, USA Dr. Rebecca Loret de Mola Corresponding author Correspondence toKellie J. Nazemi.
Gleneden Beach, Oregon, USA: MjM Software Design. Google Scholar Meyer, P. (2020). Stubborn and adaptive - Five decades of monitoring and research of self-regulated tree demography. German Journal of Forest Research, 190, 120–135. Google Scholar Mölder, A., Meyer, P., & Nagel, ...