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Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology

George W. Ware ; Lilia A. Albert ; D.G. Crosby ; Pim de Voogt ; O. Hutzinger ; James B. Knaak ; Foster L. Mayer ; D.P. Morgan ; Douglas L. Park ; Ronald S. Tjeerdema ; David M. Whitacre ; Raymond S.H. Yang ; Francis A. Gunther (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-22398-8

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-27565-9

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Organohalogen Contaminants in Delphinoid Cetaceans

Magali Houde; Paul F. Hoekstra; Keith R. Solomon; Derek C.G. Muir

People want to live in good environment. In Korea and China, ancient people tried to locate their housing and villages within good surrounding environment. This was named Poongsoo in Korea and Fengshui in China. The theory describes the harmonious spatial relationship between human settlements and natural environment. Because every place cannot have good conditions for residential location in terms of Poongsoo, ancient Koreans tried to improve their living environment by supplementing forests. It is based on Bee-Bo theory. In Korea, the landscape would be a part of total system that includes the man and nature. They thought the landscape could be damaged easily by improper land use and also be supplemented by careful landscape planning. To supplement insufficient landscape elements, Bee-Bo forest was created. It works as disaster prevention zone, microclimate control zone, biodiversity conservation patch and cultural landscape area. It is based on the philosophy that man and nature are parts of the universe and interaction between them should be managed based on energy equilibrium.

Pp. 1-57

Environmental Contamination and Human Exposure to Lead in Brazil

Monica M.B. Paoliello; Eduardo M. De Capitani

People want to live in good environment. In Korea and China, ancient people tried to locate their housing and villages within good surrounding environment. This was named Poongsoo in Korea and Fengshui in China. The theory describes the harmonious spatial relationship between human settlements and natural environment. Because every place cannot have good conditions for residential location in terms of Poongsoo, ancient Koreans tried to improve their living environment by supplementing forests. It is based on Bee-Bo theory. In Korea, the landscape would be a part of total system that includes the man and nature. They thought the landscape could be damaged easily by improper land use and also be supplemented by careful landscape planning. To supplement insufficient landscape elements, Bee-Bo forest was created. It works as disaster prevention zone, microclimate control zone, biodiversity conservation patch and cultural landscape area. It is based on the philosophy that man and nature are parts of the universe and interaction between them should be managed based on energy equilibrium.

Pp. 59-96

Arsenic Speciation and Toxicity in Biological Systems

Kazi Farzana Akter; Gary Owens; David E. Davey; Ravi Naidu

People want to live in good environment. In Korea and China, ancient people tried to locate their housing and villages within good surrounding environment. This was named Poongsoo in Korea and Fengshui in China. The theory describes the harmonious spatial relationship between human settlements and natural environment. Because every place cannot have good conditions for residential location in terms of Poongsoo, ancient Koreans tried to improve their living environment by supplementing forests. It is based on Bee-Bo theory. In Korea, the landscape would be a part of total system that includes the man and nature. They thought the landscape could be damaged easily by improper land use and also be supplemented by careful landscape planning. To supplement insufficient landscape elements, Bee-Bo forest was created. It works as disaster prevention zone, microclimate control zone, biodiversity conservation patch and cultural landscape area. It is based on the philosophy that man and nature are parts of the universe and interaction between them should be managed based on energy equilibrium.

Pp. 97-149