1. Neilands / Orians / Pfeiffer / Vennema / Westing 1972; Westing 1976, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988: 129’134, 1988a: 257’264, 1989: 129’134, 1997; Schuck 1986; Austin/Bruch 2000a; Brauch 2000:119’141, 2000a: 119’141.
2. Brauch 1990, 1990a; Poole 1991; Guthrie 1997; on the release of intelligence information for environmental research by the Clinton Administration see: Foster 2001: 373–396; Thomas 1997: 397–425.
3. Westing 1980; Brauch 1982; Brauch/Schrempf 1982; Brauch/Müller 1982; Martinetz 1995; Vöneky 2001: 10.
4. The German forces destroyed wide areas in the Norwegian Finnmark, launched massive clearance of forests in Poland, and destroyed 200,000 ha of agricultural lands in the Netherlands by salt-water inundation. The allied forces attacked several dams (Eder, Möhnesee) causing inundation, and the first use of nuclear weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki had effects on flora and fauna due to radioactive radiation. See: Westing 1980, 1985; The Committee for the Compilation of Materials on Damage Caused by the Atomic Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1981; Sandoz/Swinarsky/Zimmerman 1987; Vöneky 2001: 11–12.
5. Westing 1985; for explosive remnants in Poland: Molski/Pajak 1985; in Libya: White Book 1981; Sgaier 1985.