Forests and the Global Biogeochemical Cycle of Mercury: The Importance of Understanding Air/Vegetation Exchange Processes
-
Published:1996
Issue:
Volume:
Page:359-380
-
ISSN:
-
Container-title:Global and Regional Mercury Cycles: Sources, Fluxes and Mass Balances
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Reference53 articles.
1. Lindqvist, O., Johansson, K., Aastrup, M., Anderson, A., Bringmark, L., Hovsenius, G., Hakanson, L., Iverfeldt, A., Meili, M. and Tim, B. (1991) Mercury in the Swedish Environment — Recent Research on Causes, Consequences and Corrective Methods, Water Air Soil Pollut. 55, 1–261. 2. Nriagu, J. O. and Pacyna, J. M. (1988) Quantitative assessment of worldwide contamination of air, water and soil by trace metals, Nature 333, 134–139. 3. Slemr, F. and Langer, E. (1992) Increase in global atmospheric concentrations of mercury inferred from measurements over the Atlantic Ocean, Nature 355, 434–437. 4. Fitzgerald, W. F., Mason, R. P., Vandal, G. M. and Dulac, F. (1994) Air-Water Cycling of Mercury in Lakes, in J. Huckabee and C. Watras, (eds.), Mercury as A Global Pollutant, Lewis Publ., Boca Raton, FL, 203–220. 5. Mason, R. P., Fitzgerald, W. F., and Morel, F. M. M. (1994) The biogeochemical cycling of elemental mercury: Anthropogenic influences, Geochemica, 58, 3191–3198.
Cited by
48 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|