ENVIRONMENTAL AND LOW-TEMPERATURE GEOCHEMISTRY presents conceptual and
quantitative principles of geochemistry in order to foster
understanding of natural processes at and near the earth’s surface,
as well as anthropogenic impacts and remediation strategies. It
provides the reader with principles that allow prediction of
concentration, speciation, mobility and reactivity of elements and
compounds in soils, waters, sediments and air, drawing attention to
both thermodynamic and kinetic controls. The scope includes
atmosphere, terrestrial waters, marine waters, soils, sediments and
rocks in the shallow crust; the temporal scale is present to
Precambrian, and the spatial scale is nanometers to local, regional
and global.
This second edition of ENVIRONMENTAL AND LOW-TEMPERATURE GEOCHEMISTRY
provides the most up-to-date status of the carbon cycle and global
warming, including carbon sources, sinks, fluxes and consequences, as
well as emerging evidence for (and effects of) ocean acidification.
Understanding environmental problems like this requires knowledge
based in fundamental principles of equilibrium, kinetics, basic laws
of chemistry and physics, empirical evidence, examples from the
geological record, and identification of system fluxes and reservoirs
that allow us to conceptualize and understand. This edition aims to do
that with clear explanations of fundamental principles of geochemistry
as well as information and approaches that provide the student or
researcher with knowledge to address pressing questions in
environmental and geological sciences.
New content in this edition includes:
* Focus Boxes - one every two or three pages - providing case study
examples (e.g. methyl isocyanate in Bhopal, origins and health effects
of asbestiform minerals), concise explanations of fundamental concepts
(e.g. balancing chemical equations, isotopic fractionation, using the
Keq to predict reactivity), and useful information (e.g. units of
concentration, titrating to determine alkalinity, measuring redox
potential of natural waters);
* Sections on emerging contaminants for which knowledge is rapidly
increasing (e.g. perfluorinated compounds, pharmaceuticals and other
domestic and industrial chemicals);
* Greater attention to interrelationships of inorganic, organic and
biotic phases and processes;
* Descriptions, theoretical frameworks and examples of emerging
methodologies in geochemistry research, e.g. clumped C-O isotopes to
assess seawater temperature over geological time, metal stable
isotopes to assess source and transport processes, X-ray absorption
spectroscopy to study oxidation state and valence configuration of
atoms and molecules;
* Additional end-of-chapter problems, including more quantitatively
based questions.
* Two detailed case studies that examine fate and transport of
organic contaminants (VOCs, PFCs), with data and interpretations
presented separately. These examples consider the chemical and
mineralogical composition of rocks, soils and waters in the affected
system; microbial influence on the decomposition of organic compounds;
the effect of reduction-oxidation on transport of Fe, As and Mn;
stable isotopes and synthetic compounds as tracers of flow; geological
factors that influence flow; and implications for remediation.
The interdisciplinary approach and range of topics - including
environmental contamination of air, water and soil as well as the
processes that affect both natural and anthropogenic systems - make it
well-suited for environmental geochemistry courses at universities as
well as liberal arts colleges.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781119568612
Publisert
2019
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Wiley-Blackwell
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter