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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

Tabla de contenidos

Groundwater contamination by azinphos methyl in the Northern Patagonic Region (Argentina)

M LOEWY; V KIRS; G CARVAJAL; A VENTURINO; A PECHENDEDANGELO

Pp. 211-218

Impact of a changed inundation regime caused by climate change and floodplain rehabilitation on population viability of earthworms in a lower River Rhine floodplain

I THONON; C KLOK

Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.

Pp. 585-594

Spatial correlation of incidence of dengue with socioeconomic, demographic and environmental variables in a Brazilian city

Adriano Mondini; Francisco Chiaravalloti-Neto

Pp. 241-248

Disinfection by-products and their precursors in a water treatment plant in North China: Seasonal changes and fraction analysis

Chao Chen; Xiao-jian Zhang; Ling-xia Zhu; Jing Liu; Wen-jie He; Hong-da Han

Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.

Pp. 140-147

Effects of soil conservation measures in a partially vegetated area after forest fires

Chang-Gi Kim; Kwangil Shin; Kwang Yeong Joo; Kyu Song Lee; Seung Sook Shin; Yeonsook Choung

Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.

Pp. 158-164

Biological removal of arsenic pollution by soil fungi

Pankaj Kumar Srivastava; Aradhana Vaish; Sanjay Dwivedi; Debasis Chakrabarty; Nandita Singh; Rudra Deo Tripathi

Palabras clave: Environmental Engineering; Waste Management and Disposal; Pollution; Environmental Chemistry.

Pp. 2430-2442

Cyanobacterial blooms: Statistical models describing risk factors for national-scale lake assessment and lake management

Laurence Carvalho; Claire A. Miller; E. Marian Scott; Geoffrey A. Codd; P. Sian Davies; Andrew N. Tyler

Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.

Pp. 5353-5358

Heavy metals and trace elements in muscle of silverside (Odontesthes bonariensis) and water from different environments (Argentina): aquatic pollution and consumption effect approach

Esteban Avigliano; Nahuel Francisco Schenone; Alejandra Vanina Volpedo; Walter Goessler; Alicia Fernández Cirelli

Palabras clave: Pollution; Waste Management and Disposal; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering.

Pp. 102-108

A comparative life cycle assessment of conventional hand dryer and roll paper towel as hand drying methods

Tijo Joseph; Kelly Baah; Ali JahanfarORCID; Brajesh DubeyORCID

Pp. 109-117

Evaluation of disinfection by-product formation potential (DBPFP) during chlorination of two algae species — Blue-green Microcystis aeruginosa and diatom Cyclotella meneghiniana

Xiaobin Liao; Jinjin Liu; Mingli Yang; Hongfang Ma; Baoling Yuan; Ching-Hua Huang

Pp. 540-547