MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC

Global atmospheric concentrations of mercury (Hg) appear to be increasing and with it the potential for ecosystem exposure and ecological effects. rom 1990 to 1993 the authors examined U.S. arctic ecosystems over a broad spatial scale to develop baseline information on current concentrations of trac...

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Main Authors: D.H. Landers, J. Ford, C. Gubala, M. Monetti
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=35506
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spelling ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:35506 2023-05-15T14:46:34+02:00 MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC D.H. Landers J. Ford C. Gubala M. Monetti 2004-04-16T20:54:48Z http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=35506 unknown https://cfint.rtpnc.epa.gov/si/ntislink.cfm?dirEntryID=35506 NATIONAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS RESEARCH LABORATORY Text 2004 ftepa 2007-11-21T13:44:52Z Global atmospheric concentrations of mercury (Hg) appear to be increasing and with it the potential for ecosystem exposure and ecological effects. rom 1990 to 1993 the authors examined U.S. arctic ecosystems over a broad spatial scale to develop baseline information on current concentrations of trace elements, heavy metals, (including Hg), persistent organic compounds, and radionuclides in various components of the terrestrial and freshwater biosphere. atrices reported here include vegetation (lichens and mosses) and lake sediments. Text Arctic Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
op_collection_id ftepa
language unknown
description Global atmospheric concentrations of mercury (Hg) appear to be increasing and with it the potential for ecosystem exposure and ecological effects. rom 1990 to 1993 the authors examined U.S. arctic ecosystems over a broad spatial scale to develop baseline information on current concentrations of trace elements, heavy metals, (including Hg), persistent organic compounds, and radionuclides in various components of the terrestrial and freshwater biosphere. atrices reported here include vegetation (lichens and mosses) and lake sediments.
format Text
author D.H. Landers
J. Ford
C. Gubala
M. Monetti
spellingShingle D.H. Landers
J. Ford
C. Gubala
M. Monetti
MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
author_facet D.H. Landers
J. Ford
C. Gubala
M. Monetti
author_sort D.H. Landers
title MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
title_short MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
title_full MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
title_fullStr MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
title_full_unstemmed MERCURY IN VEGETATION AND LAKE SEDIMENTS FROM THE U.S. ARCTIC
title_sort mercury in vegetation and lake sediments from the u.s. arctic
publishDate 2004
url http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=35506
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source NATIONAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS RESEARCH LABORATORY
op_relation https://cfint.rtpnc.epa.gov/si/ntislink.cfm?dirEntryID=35506
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