For the nutritionist at Cornell University and author of the China Study, see T. Colin Campbell.
The Scottish neo-Palladian architect is generally spelled Colen Campbell.
This is a disambiguation page — a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
Campbell: Only a fraction of the oil in the reservoir is recoverable because it does not sit in one big cavern down there but in the very small pore spaces between the grains of sand.
Campbell: Oil sometimes does occur in fractured or weathered crystalline rocks, which may have led people to accept this theory, but in all cases there is an easy explanation of lateral migration from normal sources.
Campbell: Of course there is a range of alternatives from wind, sun, tide, nuclear, etc. but today they contribute only a very small percentage, and do not come close to matching the oil of the past in terms of cost or convenience.
by Professor T. ColinCampbell, Ph.D. I have been a researcher, lecturer, and policy advisor in the field of diet and cancer for nearly 40 years.
ColinCampbell is a C0-Director of the Cornell-Oxford-China Diet and Health Project.
ColinCampbell, who is Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Biochemistry at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY, has had a long career in research, teaching and development of national/international on diet, nutrition and health.