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The effects of environmental contaminants on the value of outdoor recreation : mercury and pheasant hunting in OregonShulstad, Robert N. 29 August 1973 (has links)
Graduation date: 1974
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Identification of some chlorinated pesticides by ultraviolet degradationKaufman, Willis Mast 07 May 1971 (has links)
Graduation date: 1971
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Determination of Residential-Use Turf Pesticides in Surface and Ground Water by HPLC/DADZhu, Danyun January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Organic pesticide modification of the species interactions in an annual plant communityPfleeger, Thomas G. 12 October 1990 (has links)
Graduation date: 1991
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The effects of selected pesticides on microorganisms in terrestrial and aquatic environments.Charles, Norris C. January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Isolation, identification and estimation of organochlorine pesticide residues in purified sewage effluent of the Johannesburg Metropolitan AreaNicholls, Irene Barbara 22 September 2015 (has links)
M.Sc. / The Johannesburg Metropolitan area drains sewage from approximately 1,3 million people which is treated at five different works. The Northern Works discharges approximately 50 Mt of effluent per day, which, together with 27 MX from Alexandria Works flows into the Jukskei River and hence to Hartebeespoort Dam ...
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The effects of selected pesticides on microorganisms in terrestrial and aquatic environments.Charles, Norris C. January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Honeybee Losses as Related to Crop Dusting with ArsenicalsMcGregor, S. E., Caster, A. B., Frost, Marvin H. Jr. 10 1900 (has links)
This item was digitized as part of the Million Books Project led by Carnegie Mellon University and supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Cornell University coordinated the participation of land-grant and agricultural libraries in providing historical agricultural information for the digitization project; the University of Arizona Libraries, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and the Office of Arid Lands Studies collaborated in the selection and provision of material for the digitization project.
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Determination of pesticides in environmental and food samples by capillary electrophoresis and electroanalytical methods麥麗玲, Mak, Lai-ling, Josephine. January 2001 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chemistry / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Multivariate geostatistical analysis of groundwater contamination by pesticide and nitrateSmyth, Jeffrey D. 23 May 1988 (has links)
A field study was conducted to determine the applicability of multivariate
geostatistical methods to the problem of estimating and simulating pesticide
concentrations in groundwater from measured concentrations of nitrate and pesticide,
when pesticide is undersampled. Prior to this study, no published attempt had been made
to apply multivariate geostatistics to groundwater contamination.
The study was divided into two complementary aspects of geostatistics: estimation
and simulation. The use of kriging and cokriging to estimate nitrate and the herbicide
dimethyl tetrachloroterepthalate (DCPA) contaminant densities is described in Chapter I.
Measured concentrations of nitrate and the DCPA were obtained for 42 wells in a shallow
unconfined alluvial and basin-fill aquifer in a 16.5 km² agricultural area in eastern
Oregon. The correlation coefficient between log(nitrate) and log(DCPA) was 0.74.
Isotropic, spherical models were fitted to experimental direct- and cross-semivariograms
with correlation ranges and sliding neighborhoods of 4 km. The relative gain for
estimates obtained by cokriging ranged from 14 to 34%. Additional sample locations
were selected for nitrate and DCPA using the fictitious point method. A simple economic
analysis demonstrated that additional nitrate samples would be more beneficial in reducing
estimation variances than additional DCPA samples, unless the costs of nitrate and DCPA
analysis were identical.
These estimates are by definition, the Best Linear Unbiased Estimates (i.e., the
estimates with minimized estimation variance), however the requirement of minimized
variance smoothes the variability of contaminant values. The application of conditional
simulations to groundwater contamination is described in Chapter 11. Conditional
simulation allows the degree of fluctuation of nitrate and DCPA between sample points to
be assesed. With knowledge of both the 'best' estimates and the of the variability
between sample points, nitrate and DCPA groundwater contamination in the study area
can be characterized
Based on the semivariogram models found in Chapter I, univariate and
multivariate conditional simulations of nitrate and DCPA were generated using the turning
bands method and the kriging or cokriging system. Kriging was used to condition the
univariate simulations, while cokriging was used to cross-correlate and condition the
multivariate simulations. The mean of 25 conditional and coconditional simulations at 8
different locations in the study area were generated and compared to kriging and
cokriging estimates and 95% confidence intervals.
Both conditional and coconditional simulation of the DCPA and nitrate
contaminant densities showed large variations when values in different simulations were
compared. The fluctuation in values demonstrate the uncertainties in the contaminant
distributions when sample sizes are small. As a result of this unkown component,
simulated values vary widely. Coconditional simulation displayed the cross-correlation
imposed by using the cokriging system to condition the simulations. After 25
simulations, the mean remained unstable indicating that more simulations would be
required to enable comparisons with kriging and cokriging estimates. / Graduation date: 1989
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