Showing
1 - 5
results of
5
for search '
Roser, D. J.
'
Skip to content
Toggle navigation
0
items
(Full)
All Fields
Title
Author
Subject
Find
Advanced
Search History
Search by Map:
Arctic
Antarctic
Author
Roser, D. J.
Search Results
Showing
1 - 5
results of
5
for search '
Roser, D. J.
'
, query time: 0.02s
Refine Results
Sort
Relevance
Date Descending
Date Ascending
Author
Title
List
Grid
Visual
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Add to Book Bag
Select result number 1
1
Microbiology of ornithogenic soils from the windmill islands, budd coast, continental Antarctica: Some observations on methods for measuring soil biomass in ornithogenic soils
by
Roser
,
D.J
.
,
Seppelt, R.D.
,
Ashbolt, N.
Published in
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
(1993)
Get access
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 2
2
Microbiology of ornithogenic soils from the windmill islands, budd coast, continental Antarctica: Microbial biomass distribution
by
Roser
,
D.J
.
,
Seppelt, R.D.
,
Ashbolt, N.
Published in
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
(1993)
Get access
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 3
3
Reductions in the polyhydric alcohol content of lichens as an indicator of environmental pollution
by
Roser
,
D.J
.
,
Melick, D.R.
,
Seppelt, R.D.
Published in
Antarctic Science
(1992)
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 4
4
Mycorrhizas of hepatics in continental Antarctica
by
Williams, P.G.
,
Roser
,
D.J
.
,
Seppelt, R.D.
Published in
Mycological Research
(1994)
Get access
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select result number 5
5
13 C NMR analysis of Antarctic cryptogam extracts
by
Chapman, B. E.
,
Roser
,
D
.
J
.
,
Seppelt, R. D.
Published in
Antarctic Science
(1994)
Get access
Get access
Article in Journal/Newspaper
Select Page | with selected:
Email
Export
Print
Add to Book Bag
Search Tools:
Get RSS Feed
Related Subjects
Microbiology
Soil Science
Biotechnology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Genetics
Plant Science
Loading...