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Author Triki*, I.; N.Trabelsi; Zairi, M.; Dhia, H.B.
Title Multivariate statistical and geostatistical techniques for assessing groundwater salinization in Sfax, a coastal region of eastern Tunisia Type Journal Article
Year 2014 Publication Desalination Water Treat. Abbreviated Journal
Volume 52 Issue Pages 1980-1989
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Call Number CUT @ phaedon.kyriakidis @ trikia2014 Serial 107
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Author Emadi*, M.; Baghernejad, M.
Title Comparison of spatial interpolation techniques for mapping soil pH and salinity in agricultural coastal areas, northern Iran Type Journal Article
Year 2014 Publication Arch. Agron. Soil Sci. Abbreviated Journal
Volume 60:9 Issue Pages 1315-1327
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Call Number CUT @ phaedon.kyriakidis @ Emadia2014 Serial 136
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Author Varouchakis, E.A.; Theodoridou, P.G.; Karatzas, G.P.
Title Decision-making tool for groundwater level spatial distribution and risk assessment using geostatistics in R Type Journal Article
Year 2020 Publication J. Hazard. Toxic Radioact. Waste Abbreviated Journal
Volume 24 (1) Issue Pages 04019031
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Call Number CUT @ phaedon.kyriakidis @ varouchakis2020 Serial 106
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Author Herckenrath*, D.; Langevin, C.D.; Doherty, J.
Title Predictive uncertainty analysis of a saltwater intrusion modelusing null‐space Monte Carlo Type Journal Article
Year 2011 Publication Water Resour. Res. Abbreviated Journal
Volume 47 Issue Pages 05504
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Call Number CUT @ phaedon.kyriakidis @ Herckenrath2011 Serial 150
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Author Park, H.; Schlesinger, W.
Title Global biochemical cycle of boron Type Journal Article
Year 2002 Publication Global Biogeochemical Cycles Abbreviated Journal
Volume 16 Issue Pages 1072
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Abstract The global Boron (B) cycle is primarily driven by a large flux (1.44 Tg B/yr) through the atmosphere derived from seasalt aerosols. Other significant sources of atmospheric boron include emissions during the combustion of biomass (0.26-0.43 Tg B/yr) and coal, which adds 0.20 Tg B/yr as an anthropogenic contribution. These known inputs to the atmosphere cannot account for the boron removed from the atmosphere during rainfall (3.0 Tg B/yr) and estimated dry deposition (1.3-2.7 Tg B/yr). In addition to atmospheric deposition, rock weathering is a source of boron (0.19 Tg B/yr) for terrestrial ecosystems, and humans mine about 0.31 Tg B/yr from the Earth's crust. More than 4.8 Tg B/yr circulates in the biogeochemical cycle of land plants, and about 0.53-0.63 Tg B/yr is carried from land to sea by rivers. The biogeochemical cycle of boron in the sea includes 4.4 Tg B/yr circulating in the marine biosphere, and an annual loss of 0.47 Tg B/yr to the oceanic crust via a variety of sedimentary processes that collectively remove only a small fraction of the total annual inputs to the oceans. Thus with our current understanding of the global biogeochemistry of B, the atmospheric budget shows outputs > inputs, while the marine compartments show inputs > outputs. Despite these uncertainties, it is clear that the human perturbation of the global B cycle has more than doubled the mobilization of B from the crust and contributes significantly to the B transport in rivers.
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Call Number THL @ luqianxue.zhang @ article Serial 94
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