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Ethan Ellingboe, Jay H. Arehart and Wil V. Srubar III
Pervious concrete, which has recently found new applications in buildings, is both energy- and carbon-intensive to manufacture. However, similar to normal concrete, some of the initial CO2 emissions associated with pervious concrete can be sequestered th...
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Xin Wu, Yi Zheng, Juan Zhang, Bin Wu, Sai Wang, Yong Tian, Jinguo Li and Xue Meng
Groundwater chemistry data are normally scarce in remote inland areas. Effective statistical approaches are highly desired to extract important information about hydrochemical processes from the limited data. This study applied a clustering approach base...
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Cathryn Wynn-Edwards, Rob King, So Kawaguchi, Andrew Davidson, Simon Wright, Peter D. Nichols and Patti Virtue
Around one third of all anthropogenic CO2 emissions have been absorbed by the oceans, causing changes in seawater pH and carbonate chemistry. These changes have the potential to affect phytoplankton, which are critically important for marine food webs an...
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Thomas Von Clarmann
This paper reviews the various aspects of chlorine compounds in the stratosphere, both their roles as reactants and as tracers of dynamical processes. In the stratosphere, reactive chlorine is released from chlorofluorocarbons and other chlorine-containi...
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M. PÉREZ SUÁREZ,M. E. FENN,VÍCTOR MANUEL CETINA ALCALÁ,A. ALDRETE
Throughfall and soil chemistry were compared in two sites with differing atmospheric deposition: Desierto de los Leones National Park (high atmospheric deposition) and Zoquiapan National Park (low atmospheric deposition). Throughfall fluxe...
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