The article I used as a source does have
several journal references.
Not exact matches
He has participated in
several collaborative studies for making revisions in international
reference standards for WHO, NIBSC, NVI etc. and has published more than 60 technical papers in the national & international
journals.
The company publishes under a dozen imprints in virtually all fields in the humanities and social sciences, totaling 1,500 academic,
reference, and general interest books each year in addition to
several journals in various academic and professional areas.
References: The Atlanta
Journal Constitution: Highly Contagious Dog Flu Spreads to Georgia after Dog Show The State: Highly Contagious Dog Flu Reported in SC WYKT:
Several Dog Flu Cases Surface in Central Kentucky
As far as a
reference for our work that ENSO (primarily) could explain the recent slowdown in the rate of global temperature rise... we were rejected from Eos, GRL, Climate Research, and
several other
journals.
Further, wrote Dinneen,
several commenters
referenced the article by Liska et al. in the Yale
Journal of Industrial Ecology that showed lower direct carbon intensity values than the GREET model values used by ARB.
The reports of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC),
several of which I gave to McKenna, cite hundreds of
references published in leading science
journals that show today's climate is not unusual, and evidence of future climate calamity is weak.
The study in the
Journal of Industrial Ecology by Liska et al.
referenced in both this article and
several postings (e.g., Aureon Kwolek) is one in a ** series ** of articles on corn ethanol (see www.wiley.com/go/cornethanol).