Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /

Earth scientists, who have worked together for 6 years in the priority pro­ gram "Hydrogeochemical Processes in the Hydrological Cycle Within the Unsaturated and Saturated Zones", have summarized the results of their research in this volume. This is the occasion to take stock and then look ahead. The priority program was set up by the Senate of The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in October 1981. This was preceded by lengthy and careful preparation by a Program Committee, and was finally recom­ mended by the Senate Commission for Joint Research in Earth Sciences. The main aim was the interdisciplinary research of geochemical processes in natural systems in the total underground water cycle, whereby water pollution was not to be considered. Officially started on 1 September 1982, the program has received a grant of DM 10. 9 Mio. from the DFG, and this has enabled it to support a total of 50 projects. Although at the beginning, practice-oriented projects, which were funded elsewhere, were not to be included, many of the results are applicable. The four categories presented were investigated with vary­ ing intensity. An early concentration on certain representative fields of measurement and research areas proved to be the right approach - this avoided a waste of effort in other fields. During the period of the priority program, new and topical questions arose, e. g.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthess, G. editor., Frimmel, F. editor., Hirsch, P. editor., Schulz, H. D. editor., Usdowski, H.-E. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1992
Subjects:Earth sciences., Organic chemistry., Chemical engineering., Mineralogy., Geotechnical engineering., Geography., Ecology., Earth Sciences., Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences., Geography, general., Organic Chemistry., Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76629-9
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id KOHA-OAI-TEST:220701
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Earth sciences.
Organic chemistry.
Chemical engineering.
Mineralogy.
Geotechnical engineering.
Geography.
Ecology.
Earth Sciences.
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.
Mineralogy.
Geography, general.
Organic Chemistry.
Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.
Ecology.
Earth sciences.
Organic chemistry.
Chemical engineering.
Mineralogy.
Geotechnical engineering.
Geography.
Ecology.
Earth Sciences.
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.
Mineralogy.
Geography, general.
Organic Chemistry.
Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.
Ecology.
spellingShingle Earth sciences.
Organic chemistry.
Chemical engineering.
Mineralogy.
Geotechnical engineering.
Geography.
Ecology.
Earth Sciences.
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.
Mineralogy.
Geography, general.
Organic Chemistry.
Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.
Ecology.
Earth sciences.
Organic chemistry.
Chemical engineering.
Mineralogy.
Geotechnical engineering.
Geography.
Ecology.
Earth Sciences.
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.
Mineralogy.
Geography, general.
Organic Chemistry.
Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.
Ecology.
Matthess, G. editor.
Frimmel, F. editor.
Hirsch, P. editor.
Schulz, H. D. editor.
Usdowski, H.-E. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
description Earth scientists, who have worked together for 6 years in the priority pro­ gram "Hydrogeochemical Processes in the Hydrological Cycle Within the Unsaturated and Saturated Zones", have summarized the results of their research in this volume. This is the occasion to take stock and then look ahead. The priority program was set up by the Senate of The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in October 1981. This was preceded by lengthy and careful preparation by a Program Committee, and was finally recom­ mended by the Senate Commission for Joint Research in Earth Sciences. The main aim was the interdisciplinary research of geochemical processes in natural systems in the total underground water cycle, whereby water pollution was not to be considered. Officially started on 1 September 1982, the program has received a grant of DM 10. 9 Mio. from the DFG, and this has enabled it to support a total of 50 projects. Although at the beginning, practice-oriented projects, which were funded elsewhere, were not to be included, many of the results are applicable. The four categories presented were investigated with vary­ ing intensity. An early concentration on certain representative fields of measurement and research areas proved to be the right approach - this avoided a waste of effort in other fields. During the period of the priority program, new and topical questions arose, e. g.
format Texto
topic_facet Earth sciences.
Organic chemistry.
Chemical engineering.
Mineralogy.
Geotechnical engineering.
Geography.
Ecology.
Earth Sciences.
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.
Mineralogy.
Geography, general.
Organic Chemistry.
Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.
Ecology.
author Matthess, G. editor.
Frimmel, F. editor.
Hirsch, P. editor.
Schulz, H. D. editor.
Usdowski, H.-E. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Matthess, G. editor.
Frimmel, F. editor.
Hirsch, P. editor.
Schulz, H. D. editor.
Usdowski, H.-E. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Matthess, G. editor.
title Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
title_short Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
title_full Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
title_fullStr Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
title_full_unstemmed Progress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models /
title_sort progress in hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : organics — carbonate systems — silicate systems — microbiology — models /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
publishDate 1992
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76629-9
work_keys_str_mv AT matthessgeditor progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
AT frimmelfeditor progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
AT hirschpeditor progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
AT schulzhdeditor progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
AT usdowskiheeditor progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
AT springerlinkonlineservice progressinhydrogeochemistryelectronicresourceorganicscarbonatesystemssilicatesystemsmicrobiologymodels
_version_ 1756270199299899392
spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2207012018-07-30T23:58:07ZProgress in Hydrogeochemistry [electronic resource] : Organics — Carbonate Systems — Silicate Systems — Microbiology — Models / Matthess, G. editor. Frimmel, F. editor. Hirsch, P. editor. Schulz, H. D. editor. Usdowski, H.-E. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,1992.engEarth scientists, who have worked together for 6 years in the priority pro­ gram "Hydrogeochemical Processes in the Hydrological Cycle Within the Unsaturated and Saturated Zones", have summarized the results of their research in this volume. This is the occasion to take stock and then look ahead. The priority program was set up by the Senate of The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in October 1981. This was preceded by lengthy and careful preparation by a Program Committee, and was finally recom­ mended by the Senate Commission for Joint Research in Earth Sciences. The main aim was the interdisciplinary research of geochemical processes in natural systems in the total underground water cycle, whereby water pollution was not to be considered. Officially started on 1 September 1982, the program has received a grant of DM 10. 9 Mio. from the DFG, and this has enabled it to support a total of 50 projects. Although at the beginning, practice-oriented projects, which were funded elsewhere, were not to be included, many of the results are applicable. The four categories presented were investigated with vary­ ing intensity. An early concentration on certain representative fields of measurement and research areas proved to be the right approach - this avoided a waste of effort in other fields. During the period of the priority program, new and topical questions arose, e. g.1 Scope -- 2 Polar Organic Substances and Their Role in the Water-Saturated and -Unsaturated Zones -- 2.0 Introduction -- 2.1 Isolation Procedures and Characterization Methods -- 2.2 Interaction of Inorganics with Humic Substances -- 2.3 Characterization of Some Organic Acids in the Subsurface of the Sandhausen Ecosystem -- 3 Carbonate Systems -- 3.0 Introduction -- 3.1 Dissolution Kinetics in the Generation of Carbonate Ground Waters -- 3.2 Field Studies on Subsurface Water of Selected Sites -- 3.3 Alteration in Karst Systems -- 4 Silicate Systems -- 4.0 Introduction -- 4.1 Redox Reactions in the Subsurface -- 4.2 Rock-Water Interaction -- 4.3 Reaction Kinetics -- 5 Microbiology -- 5.0 Introduction -- 5.1 Characterization of the Natural Subsurface Environment -- 5.2 Microbial Activities -- 5.3 Microbiology of Selected Locations -- 6 Hydrogeochemical and Geochemical-Hydraulic Models and Model Concepts -- 6.0 Introduction -- 6.1 Hydrogeochemical Models and Concepts -- 6.2 Combination of Transport and Geochemical Reactions -- 6.3 Description of Geochemical Environments with Thermodynamic Equilibrium Models -- 7 Perspectives and Needs for Future Work -- References.Earth scientists, who have worked together for 6 years in the priority pro­ gram "Hydrogeochemical Processes in the Hydrological Cycle Within the Unsaturated and Saturated Zones", have summarized the results of their research in this volume. This is the occasion to take stock and then look ahead. The priority program was set up by the Senate of The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in October 1981. This was preceded by lengthy and careful preparation by a Program Committee, and was finally recom­ mended by the Senate Commission for Joint Research in Earth Sciences. The main aim was the interdisciplinary research of geochemical processes in natural systems in the total underground water cycle, whereby water pollution was not to be considered. Officially started on 1 September 1982, the program has received a grant of DM 10. 9 Mio. from the DFG, and this has enabled it to support a total of 50 projects. Although at the beginning, practice-oriented projects, which were funded elsewhere, were not to be included, many of the results are applicable. The four categories presented were investigated with vary­ ing intensity. An early concentration on certain representative fields of measurement and research areas proved to be the right approach - this avoided a waste of effort in other fields. During the period of the priority program, new and topical questions arose, e. g.Earth sciences.Organic chemistry.Chemical engineering.Mineralogy.Geotechnical engineering.Geography.Ecology.Earth Sciences.Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences.Mineralogy.Geography, general.Organic Chemistry.Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering.Ecology.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76629-9URN:ISBN:9783642766299