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Science of The Total Environment
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Science of the Total Environment is an international journal for publication of original research on the total environment, which includes the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and anthroposphere.The total environment is characterized where these five spheres overlap. Studies that focus on at least two or three of these will be given primary consideration. Papers reporting results from only one sphere will not be considered. Field studies are given priority over laboratory studies. The total environment is studied when data are collected and described from these five spheres. By definition total environment studies must be multidisciplinary.
Examples of data from the five spheres are given below:
Subject areas may include, but are not limited to:
• Agriculture, forestry, land use and management
• Air pollution quality and human health
• Contaminant (bio)monitoring and assessment
• Ecosystem services and life cycle assessments
• Ecotoxicology and risk assessment
• Emerging fields including global change and contaminants
• Environmental management and policy
• Environmental remediation
• Environmental sources, processes and global cycling
• Groundwater hydrogeochemistry and modeling
• Human health risk assessment and management
• Nanomaterials in the environment
• Noise in the environment
• Persistent organic pollutants
• Plant science and toxicology
• Remote sensing
• Stress ecology in marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems
• Trace metals and organics in biogeochemical cycles
• Waste and water treatment
The editors discourage submission of papers which describe results from routine surveys or monitoring programs, studies which are local in scope, laboratory experiments, hydroponic or pot studies measuring biochemical/physiological endpoints, food science studies, screening of new plant species for phytoremediation, testing known chemicals in another setting, and experimental studies lacking a testable hypothesis.
The abstract, highlights and conclusions of papers in this journal must contain clear and concise statements as to why the study was done and how readers will benefit from the results. Articles submitted for publication in Science of the Total Environment should establish connections among research findings with implications for environmental quality, ecological health, and/or human health.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde may. 1972 / hasta dic. 2023 | ScienceDirect |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0048-9697
ISSN electrónico
1879-1026
Editor responsable
Elsevier
País de edición
Países Bajos
Fecha de publicación
1972-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Characterizing the microbiome in petroleum reservoir flooded by different water sources
Xiaotong Wang; Xizhe Li; Li Yu; Lixin Huang; Jianlong Xiu; Wei Lin; Yanming Zhang
Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.
Pp. 872-885
Innovative application of biobed bioremediation systems to remove emerging contaminants: Adsorption, degradation and bioaccesibility
L. Delgado-Moreno; S. Bazhari; R. Nogales; E. Romero
Pp. 990-997
Microcosm experiments and kinetic modeling of glyphosate biodegradation in soils and sediments
Fiona H.M. Tang; Thomas C. Jeffries; R. Willem Vervoort; Chris Conoley; Nicholas V. Coleman; Federico Maggi
Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.
Pp. 105-115
A comparison of trichloromethane formation from two algae species during two pre-oxidation-coagulation-chlorination processes
Xiaoyang Shi; Ran Bi; Baoling Yuan; Xiaobin Liao; Zhenming Zhou; Fei Li; Wenjie Sun
Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.
Pp. 1063-1070
The state of desalination and brine production: A global outlook
Edward Jones; Manzoor Qadir; Michelle T.H. van Vliet; Vladimir Smakhtin; Seong-mu Kang
Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.
Pp. 1343-1356
Patterns of soil microbial nutrient limitations and their roles in the variation of soil organic carbon across a precipitation gradient in an arid and semi-arid region
Yongxing Cui; Linchuan Fang; Lei Deng; Xiaobin Guo; Fu Han; Wenliang Ju; Xia Wang; Hansong Chen; Wenfeng Tan; Xingchang Zhang
Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.
Pp. 1440-1451
One Health - Cycling of diverse microbial communities as a connecting force for soil, plant, animal, human and ecosystem health
Ariena H.C. van Bruggen; Erica M. Goss; Arie Havelaar; Anne D. van Diepeningen; Maria R. Finckh; J. Glenn Morris
Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.
Pp. 927-937
A comparative study on the environmental impact of greenhouses: A probabilistic approach
Farzin Golzar; Niko Heeren; Stefanie Hellweg; Ramin Roshandel
Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.
Pp. 560-569
Use of (modified) natural adsorbents for arsenic remediation: A review
Tsegaye Girma Asere; Christian V. Stevens; Gijs Du Laing
Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.
Pp. 706-720
Changes in soil N2O and CH4 emissions and related microbial functional groups in an artificial CO2 gassing experiment
Wenmei He; Youjin Kim; Daegeun Ko; Seongtaek Yun; Seongchun Jun; Gayoung Yoo
Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.
Pp. 40-49