Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roberts, Marilyn
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: H1 Connect 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3410/f.1026788.329521
id crf1000:10.3410/f.1026788.329521
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spelling crf1000:10.3410/f.1026788.329521 2024-06-02T08:13:00+00:00 Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene. Roberts, Marilyn 2005 http://dx.doi.org/10.3410/f.1026788.329521 unknown H1 Connect Faculty Opinions – Post-Publication Peer Review of the Biomedical Literature dataset 2005 crf1000 https://doi.org/10.3410/f.1026788.329521 2024-05-07T13:52:12Z Dataset permafrost F1000Research
institution Open Polar
collection F1000Research
op_collection_id crf1000
language unknown
format Dataset
author Roberts, Marilyn
spellingShingle Roberts, Marilyn
Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
author_facet Roberts, Marilyn
author_sort Roberts, Marilyn
title Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
title_short Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
title_full Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
title_fullStr Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
title_full_unstemmed Faculty Opinions recommendation of Present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the Upper Pleistocene.
title_sort faculty opinions recommendation of present-day mercury resistance transposons are common in bacteria preserved in permafrost grounds since the upper pleistocene.
publisher H1 Connect
publishDate 2005
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3410/f.1026788.329521
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_source Faculty Opinions – Post-Publication Peer Review of the Biomedical Literature
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3410/f.1026788.329521
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