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Found 9759 publications. Showing page 196 of 391:

Publication  
Year  
Category

Inverse modelling of radionuclide release rates using gamma dose rate observations.

Hamburger, T.; Stohl, A.; von Haustein, C.; Thummerer, S.; Wallner, C.

2014

Inverse modelling of radionuclide release rates using gamma dose rate observations.

Hamburger, T.; Evangeliou, N.; Stohl, A.; von Haustein, C.; Thummerer, S.; Wallner, C.

2015

Investigating relationships between exposure to organohalogenated contaminants and biomarkers of health in a marine top predator - exploring the toolbox

Hansen, Elisabeth; Bustnes, Jan Ove; Herzke, Dorte; Helander, Björn; Criscuolo, François; Huber, N; Eulaers, Igor; Sun, J.; Bourgeon, Sophie

2022

Investigating snow deposition of cyclic siloxanes in an Arctic environment

Nipen, Maja; Hartz, William Frederik; Bäcklund, Are; Schulze, Dorothea; Christensen, Guttorm; Løge, Oda Siebke; Nikiforov, Vladimir; Bohlin-Nizzetto, Pernilla

cVMS are high production volume chemicals that are used for a wide range of industrial and domestic applications. Given the high volatility of cVMS, emissions occur mainly to the atmosphere, and cVMS are present in the Arctic atmosphere, e.g. at the Zeppelin Observatory near Ny Ålesund, Svalbard, suggesting potential for long-range atmospheric transport. A study to investigate whether cVMS have the potential to deposit to surface media, and thereby represent a potential risk to the terrestrial or marine environment in polar and Arctic regions was carried out. Overall, cVMS levels in samples of vegetation, soil, sediment and marine biota were low. D4 was detected in most samples at concentrations above LOD, but below LOQ, while D5 and D6 were generally not detected. The low cVMS concentrations in soil, vegetation, sediments, and fish are in line with most current research on cVMS in remote regions, which together suggest that input of cVMS from atmospheric deposition and snow melt is likely not a major contributing source.

NILU

2024

Investigating the impact of climate change on PCB-153 exposure in Arctic seabirds with the nested exposure model

Skogeng, Lovise Pedersen; Blévin, Pierre; Breivik, Knut; Bustnes, Jan Ove; Eulaers, Igor; Sagerup, Kjetil; Krogseth, Ingjerd Sunde

At the same time Arctic ecosystems experiences rapid climate change, at a rate four times faster than the global average, they remain burdened by long-range transported pollution, notably with legacy polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The present study investigates the potential impact of climate change on seabird exposure to PCB-153 using the established Nested Exposure Model (NEM), here expanded with three seabird species, i.e. common eider (Somateria mollissima), black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) and glaucous gull (Larus hyperboreus), as well as the filter feeder blue mussel (Mytulis edulis). The model's performance was evaluated using empirical time trends of the seabird species in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard, and using tissue concentrations from filter feeders along the northern Norwegian coast. NEM successfully replicated empirical PCB-153 concentrations, confirming its ability to simulate PCB-153 bioaccumulation in the studied seabird species within an order of magnitude. Based on global PCB-153 emission estimates, simulations run until the year 2100 predicted seabird blood concentrations 99% lower than in year 2000. Model scenarios with climate change-induced altered dietary composition and lipid dynamics showed to have minimal impact on future PCB-153 exposure, compared to temporal changes in primary emissions of PCB-153. The present study suggests the potential of mechanistic modelling in assessing POP exposure in Arctic seabirds within a multiple stressor context.

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

2025

Investigating the long-term trends of atmospheric POPs in the Canadian and Norwegian Arctic: a spatial comparison.

Becker, S.; Crispin, H.; Wlodech, T.; Hayley, H.; Blanchard, P.; Li, H.; Fellin, P.; Kallenborn, R.; Schlabach, M.; Manø, S.

2005

Investigating the occurance and dynamics of PCBs and PCNs between Arctic snow and air. NILU F

Herbert, B.M.J.; Halsall, C.J.; Fitzpatrick, L.; Jones, K.C.; Thomas, G.O.; Kallenborn, R.

2003

Investigating the occurence of PCBs, PCNs and OCs in temperate and Arctic snow.

Fitzpatrick, L.; Herbert, B.M.J.; Thomas, G.O.; Jones, K.C.; Shoeib, M.; Harner, T.; Kallenborn, R.

2002

Investigating the presence and persistence of volatile methylsiloxanes in Arctic sediments

Abrahamsson, Dimitri Panagopoulos; Warner, Nicholas Alexander; Jantunen, Liisa; Jahnke, Annika; Wong, Fiona; MacLeod, Matthew

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

2020

Investigating the Sensitivity of Low-Cost Sensors in Measuring Particle Number Concentrations across Diverse Atmospheric Conditions in Greece and Spain

Kosmopoulos, Georgios; Salamalikis, Vasileios; Wilbert, Stefan; Zarzalejo, Luis F.; Hanrieder, Natalie; Karatzas, Stylianos; Kazantzidis, Andreas

Low-cost sensors (LCSs) for particulate matter (PM) concentrations have attracted the interest of researchers, supplementing their efforts to quantify PM in higher spatiotemporal resolution. The precision of PM mass concentration measurements from PMS 5003 sensors has been widely documented, though limited information is available regarding their size selectivity and number concentration measurement accuracy. In this work, PMS 5003 sensors, along with a Federal Referral Methods (FRM) sampler (Grimm spectrometer), were deployed across three sites with different atmospheric profiles, an urban (Germanou) and a background (UPat) site in Patras (Greece), and a semi-arid site in Almería (Spain, PSA). The LCSs particle number concentration measurements were investigated for different size bins. Findings for particles with diameter between 0.3 and 10 μm suggest that particle size significantly affected the LCSs’ response. The LCSs could accurately detect number concentrations for particles smaller than 1 μm in the urban (R2 = 0.9) and background sites (R2 = 0.92), while a modest correlation was found with the reference instrument in the semi-arid area (R2 = 0.69). However, their performance was rather poor (R2

MDPI

2023

Investigating the sources and atmospheric processing of fine particles from Asia and the Northwestern United States measured during INTEX B.

Peltier, R.E.; Hecobian, A.H.; Weber, R.J.; Stohl, A.; Atlas, E.L.; Riemer, D.D.; Blake, D.R.; Apel, E.; Campos, T.; Karl, T.

2008

Investigation of CO2 in Norwegian classrooms. Student-based research campaign. NILU OR

Innset, B.; Endregard, G.; Arnesen, K.; Bartonova, A.; Braathen, O.A.

2003

Investigation of cyclic relation between Nyiragongo SO2fluxes and its lava lake height

Brenot, Hugues; Theys, Nicolas; Van Roozendael, Michel; Fayt, Caroline; Gliss, Jonas; Stebel, Kerstin; Smets, Benoit; Barriere, Julien; d'Oreye, Nicolas; Mapendano, Mathieu Yalire; Minani, Abel; Syauswa, Muhindo; Arrellano, Santiago; Kervyn, Francois

2019

Investigation of incident at UMB July 14th, 2010. In-depth study of a laboratory incident. NILU TR

Dye, C.; Gjersøe, R.; Johansen, Ø.H.; Nevstad, G.O.; Stenstrøm, Y.

2010

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