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Found 9895 publications. Showing page 294 of 396:

Publication  
Year  
Category

Lung cancer risk prediction using DNA methylation markers

Guida, Florence; Nøst, Therese Haugdahl; Relton, Caroline; Vineis, Paolo; Chadeau-Hyam, Marc; Severi, Gianluca; Sandanger, Torkjel M; Johansson, Mattias

2019

Epigenetic effects of nanomaterials

Smolkova, Bozena; Dusinska, Maria; Gábelová, Alena

2019

Nitrogen: den ukjente klimatrusselen

Tørseth, Kjetil; Austnes, Kari (interview subjects); Høseggen, Simen (journalist)

2019

Sandra skal ta fluorjukserne på skistadion

Schlabach, Martin (interview subject); Krokfjord, Torgeir; Rasmussen, John; Oksnes, Bernt Jakob; Gedde-Dahl, Siri; Langsem, Bjørn (journalists)

2019

Luftkvalitet i norske byer

Grossberndt, Sonja

2019

Can long-range atmospheric transport events of "new" POPs to a remote site in Norway be predicted using FLEXPART?

Möckel, Claudia; Eckhardt, Sabine; Krogseth, Ingjerd Sunde; Breivik, Knut

2019

Mutational Imprints of Cobalt Exposure: A Genome-Scale Multi-system Approach.

Zavadil, J.; Melki, P. N.; Renard, C.; Mariussen, Espen; Rundén-Pran, Elise; Longhin, Eleonora Marte; Dusinska, Maria; Sancey, L.; Busser, B.; Herbert, R. A.; Korenjak, M.

John Wiley & Sons

2019

Plastic litter in the European Arctic: What do we know?

Halsband, Claudia; Herzke, Dorte

Despite an exponential increase in available data on marine plastic debris globally, information on levels and trends of plastic pollution and especially microplastics in the Arctic remains scarce. The few available peer-reviewed scientific works, however, point to a ubiquitous distribution of plastic particles in all environmental compartments, including sea ice. Here, we review the current state of knowledge on the sources, distribution, transport pathways and fate of meso- and microplastics with a focus on the European Arctic and discuss observed and projected impacts on biota and ecosystems.

2019

Levels and trends of poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances in the Arctic environment – An update

Muir, Derek; Bossi, Rossana; Carlsson, Pernilla; Evans, Marlene; De Silva, Amila; Halsall, Crispin; Rauert, Cassandra; Herzke, Dorte; Hung, Hayley; Letcher, Robert; Rigét, Frank; Roos, Anna

Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are important environmental contaminants globally and in the early 2000s they were shown to be ubiquitous contaminants in Arctic wildlife. Previous reviews by Butt et al. and Letcher et al. have covered studies on levels and trends of PFASs in the Arctic that were available to 2009. The purpose of this review is to focus on more recent work, generally published between 2009 and 2018, with emphasis on PFASs of emerging concern such as perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (PFCAs) and short-chain perfluoroalkyl sulfonates (PFSAs) and their precursors. Atmospheric measurements over the period 2006–2014 have shown that fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) as well as perfluorobutanoic acid (PFBA) and perfluoroctanoic acid (PFOA) are the most prominent PFASs in the arctic atmosphere, all with increasing concentrations at Alert although PFOA concentrations declined at the Zeppelin Station (Svalbard). Results from ice cores show generally increasing deposition of PFCAs on the Devon Ice cap in the Canadian arctic while declining fluxes were found in a glacier on Svalbard. An extensive dataset exists for long-term trends of long-chain PFCAs that have been reported in Arctic biota with some datasets including archived samples from the 1970s and 1980s. Trends in PFCAs over time vary among the same species across the North American Arctic, East and West Greenland, and Svalbard. Most long term time series show a decline from higher concentrations in the early 2000s. However there have been recent (post 2010) increasing trends of PFCAs in ringed seals in the Canadian Arctic, East Greenland polar bears and in arctic foxes in Svalbard. Annual biological sampling is helping to determine these relatively short term changes. Rising levels of some PFCAs have been explained by continued emissions of long-chain PFCAs and/or their precursors and inflows to the Arctic Ocean, especially from the North Atlantic. While the effectiveness of biological sampling for temporal trends in long-chain PFCAs and PFSAs has been demonstrated, this does not apply to the C4–C8–PFCAs, perfluorobutane sulfonamide (FBSA), or perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) which are generally present at low concentrations in biota. In addition to air sampling, sampling abiotic media such as glacial cores, and annual sampling of lake waters and seawater would appear to be the best approaches for investigating trends in the less bioaccumulative PFASs.

2019

PMF based source apportionment of aethalometer data

Platt, Stephen Matthew; Yttri, Karl Espen; Aas, Wenche

2019

Går mot rekordlite hull i ozonlaget

Hansen, Georg Heinrich (interview subject); Elster, Kristian (journalist)

2019

Plastic fantastic

Hanssen, Linda

2019

Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service. Interim Annual Assessment Report for 2018. European air quality in 2018

Tarrasón, Leonor; Hamer, Paul David; Guerreiro, Cristina; Meleux, Frederik; Rouil, Laurence

Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service

2019

Ozone measurements 2017

Hjellbrekke, Anne-Gunn; Solberg, Sverre

NILU

2019

Amine based CO2 capture at Melkøya. Modelling of nitrosamines and nitramines.

Tønnesen, Dag; Svendby, Tove Marit; Weydahl, Torleif

NILU

2019

SEN4POL Phase-1: Final Scientific Report

Schneider, Philipp; Hamer, Paul David; Trier, Øivind Due; Solberg, Rune; Ramfjord, Hallvard; Brobakk, Trond Einar; Skogesal, Hogne

Norsk institutt for luftforskning

2019

ClairCity: Citizen-led air pollution reduction in cities. D7.4 Final City Policy Package – First City (Bristol)

Slingerland, Stephan; Artola, Irati; Bolscher, Hans; Barnes, Jo; Boushel, Corra; de Vito, Laura; Fogg-Rogers, Laura; Hayes, Enda; Rodrigues, Vera; Oliveira, Kevin; Lopes, Myriam; Vanherle, Kris; Csobod, Eva; Trozzi, Carlo; Knudsen, Svein; Soares, Joana

ClairCity aims to contribute to citizen-inclusive air quality and carbon policy making in middle-sized European cities. It does so by investigating citizens’ current behaviours, their preferred future behaviours and their preferred future policy measures in six European cities. The project also examines the possible future impacts of citizens’ policy preferences and implementation possibilities for these measures in the light of the existing institutional contexts in each city. With this aim, ClairCity has carried out in all six cities an extensive citizen, stakeholder and policy maker engagement process (Chapter 1). This report summarises the main policy results for the first of the six cities, Bristol (UK). The other ClairCity cities are Amsterdam (NL), Ljubljana (SL), Sosnowiec (PL), CIRA/ Aveiro (PT) and Liguria / Genoa (IT).

ClairCity Project

2019

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