戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 al roles on primordial Earth, given its poor geochemical accessibility.
2                                              Geochemical analyses and thermodynamic modelling reveal
3                      Solid- and solute-phase geochemical analyses combined with modeled bioturbation
4 ic, metatranscriptomic, genomic binning, and geochemical analyses from Axial Seamount, an active subm
5 barcoding analyses with sedimentological and geochemical analyses from three lake-catchment systems t
6     This study presents sedimentological and geochemical analyses of core data retrieved from the upp
7                                              Geochemical analyses of sedimentary barites (barium sulf
8         We present data from microscopic and geochemical analyses of the Upper Devonian Chattanooga S
9 layers around the concretions, combined with geochemical analyses, reveal that Sr was incorporated in
10 rrihydrite and investigated the system using geochemical analyses, X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS
11 geted metagenome analysis were combined with geochemical analyses.
12                   Here, we conduct nanoscale geochemical analysis of a framboidal magnetite grain wit
13 s of stomatal and vascular conductivity with geochemical analysis of fossilized tissues and process-b
14  obtained from high-resolution trace-element geochemical analysis of Homo sapiens (both modern and fo
15 tailed shard morphology characterization and geochemical analysis suggest that two tephra layers were
16 and compared these with outputs from various geochemical and adsorption models that were run as a fun
17              In contrast, here we show clear geochemical and biological evidence for methane producti
18      This comprehensive, integrated study of geochemical and biological variability of headwater stre
19 haeological ornaments using microstructural, geochemical and biomolecular analyses, including 'palaeo
20 ghting the ability of the sensor to decouple geochemical and biotic effects on phosphate dynamics in
21   In this study, we examined the geographic, geochemical and ecological factors that influence microb
22                                      In many geochemical and environmental studies structure-propertr
23                          However, new field, geochemical and geochronological data from the Culebra C
24                               These combined geochemical and geophysical data indicate that the struc
25   Little is known about this storage because geochemical and geophysical observations are limited to
26                                              Geochemical and hydrological data from abandoned mine wa
27                      Finally, by integrating geochemical and hydrological data we present a new conce
28 in objective of this work was to investigate geochemical and hydrological processes governing the sub
29                                     However, geochemical and hydrological shifts during MAR can relea
30 les in conjunction with previously published geochemical and isotope data indicate a biogenic origin
31  arc, which displays one of the most extreme geochemical and isotopic ranges, although the origin of
32                                 We establish geochemical and isotopic tracers that can identify Bakke
33 ism plays an important role in producing the geochemical and isotopic variations in arc lavas.
34                        In the present study, geochemical and microbial data sets collected from 35 we
35                Here we present petrographic, geochemical and microbial DNA evidence preserved in prec
36                             Using a suite of geochemical and microbiological analyses, we measured th
37                                We synthesize geochemical and mineralogical data from lake-bed mudston
38  as well as independent of location-specific geochemical and mineralogical factors.
39 kwash deposits are identified by terrestrial geochemical and mineralogical signatures, associated wit
40 ucture of Sulfolobus islandicus by comparing geochemical and molecular analysis from seven hot spring
41                        Our results, based on geochemical and molecular genetic assays on sediments fr
42 proxies obtained from the most comprehensive geochemical and palaeobiological dataset yet collected t
43                       We applied independent geochemical and palynological proxies to a sedimentary a
44  silica surface, critical to a wide range of geochemical and technological applications.
45 rom a deep hot source, inferred to represent geochemical and temperature variations at Solfatara.
46                            This study of the geochemical and temporal differences between the NW and
47                             We interpret the geochemical and temporal differences between the SE and
48  is applicable to the study of hydrological, geochemical, and biological interactions for a range of
49 e report insights from a joint hydrological, geochemical, and metagenomics characterization of a geot
50               Here, we report the molecular, geochemical, and mineralogical composition of organo-min
51      Combined microscopic, microtomographic, geochemical, and sedimentologic analyses provide evidenc
52 ion of early Hadean (>4.5 billion years ago) geochemical anomalies in lavas sampling this reservoir.
53 interpretation for the origin of seismic and geochemical anomalies in the deep lower mantle, as well
54  isotope ratios can offer a large variety of geochemical applications in particular for the determina
55                          Genetic markers and geochemical assays of microbial nitrogen cycling process
56 e different sources of uranium (uranium ore, geochemical background, and uranium from anthropogenic a
57 es plays a crucial role in the catalytic and geochemical behavior of metal oxides.
58                                 However, the geochemical behavior of this toxic redox-sensitive oxyan
59 likely of critical importance to explain the geochemical behavior of U.
60                                          The geochemical behaviors of phosphate-containing species at
61 ferent natural and anthropogenic sources and geochemical behaviors, were used to compare streamwater
62 ess of water over elements that show similar geochemical behaviour during mantle melting (for example
63 e current study were to: identify biological/geochemical/biophysical determinants of and characterize
64 e of subseafloor microbial activity on fluid geochemical budgets.
65                                              Geochemical calculations explicitly incorporating this m
66 ntly limited in our ability to deal with the geochemical changes unfolding in our coastal ocean.
67  an adequate explanation for the longer-term geochemical changes.
68 rcury methyltransferase, hgcA, combined with geochemical characterisation of soils, were used to dete
69 bitat hosts a vast microbial population, and geochemical characteristics suggest that nitrogen compou
70 should therefore be combined with a detailed geochemical characterization of water samples.
71                 Here we present magnetic and geochemical climate records from the northeastern Tibeta
72        The results are of importance for the geochemical community studying terrestrial NOM with stru
73         Although geography controls regional geochemical composition and population differentiation,
74                                          The geochemical composition of the hydrothermal fluids sugge
75 t to be persistent in groundwater under most geochemical conditions but more recently have been found
76                      Changing hydrologic and geochemical conditions cause U to be released into groun
77 al ground truth proxies for studying life in geochemical conditions close to those assumed to be pres
78 e and reciprocally, that gene abundances and geochemical conditions largely determine gene expression
79                                          The geochemical conditions leading to ternary uranyl complex
80 isation of canopy traits across climatic and geochemical conditions remain uncertain.
81  consistent proto-metabolism under different geochemical conditions, which are still surrounded by hi
82 ith respect to contamination and fluctuating geochemical conditions.
83 ze different electron acceptors depending on geochemical conditions.
84 rately exergonic or endergonic even at ideal geochemical conditions.
85 from the AIS than the GrIS, highlighting the geochemical consequences of prolonged water residence ti
86  (Hg(II)(i), Hg(0)((aq)), MeHg) and relevant geochemical constituents in pore waters of eight Alaskan
87  underlying mantle, although geophysical and geochemical constraints on the exact thickness and defin
88  local seismic source studies, geodetic, and geochemical constraints, are typically most sensitive to
89                                        Using geochemical constraints, we examine an extensive compila
90 ope (delta(98/95)Mo) analyses to investigate geochemical controls on Mo mobility within a tailings ma
91                                     However, geochemical controls on V mobility within coke deposits
92  modelling approach revealed additional soil geochemical covariates affected DTPA-extractable soil Zn
93 low predicting the role of green rust on the geochemical cycle of ions, including nutrients, in soils
94 /y), humans are the predominant force in the geochemical cycle of V at Earth's surface.
95 uld be important for understanding dynamics, geochemical cycle, and dynamo generation in water-rich p
96 curately assigned microbial contributions to geochemical cycles and automated the partitioning of gut
97 ially have important consequences for global geochemical cycles of iodine, including iodine levels of
98  the study of deep biospheres, their role in geochemical cycles, and their potential to inform on the
99 ng permanent changes to terrestrial ecology, geochemical cycles, atmospheric CO(2) levels, and climat
100 , and explore the implications for long-term geochemical cycles.
101 from subducting slabs are critical in global geochemical cycles.
102 ically influences its environmental fate and geochemical cycling and is also of interest in water tre
103  slabs and play key roles in controlling the geochemical cycling and physical properties of subductio
104 tributed over the Earth's surface, and their geochemical cycling is globally important.
105 on and sulfur, and has a major impact in the geochemical cycling of these elements in low-pH environm
106  important variable but near-surface-aquifer geochemical data also were significant.
107                                          Our geochemical data collectively provide the oldest evidenc
108     Here we report new geophysical and fluid geochemical data for high-temperature active hydrotherma
109                                   We provide geochemical data for the highest-(3)He/(4)He lavas from
110                                              Geochemical data from 40 water wells were used to examin
111                          We present compiled geochemical data of young (mostly Pliocene-present) inte
112              Here we report petrological and geochemical data on magmas erupted 4.7-0.3 Myr ago in ce
113 have been elucidated by microearthquakes and geochemical data over a broad spectrum of spreading rate
114                                          The geochemical data provided important information for fiel
115                                          The geochemical data show a near-perfect correlation between
116 wetlands of intermediate trophic status, and geochemical data suggest mercury methylation pathways va
117                                          Our geochemical data suggest that cable bacteria promote con
118                                  Indeed, the geochemical data suggests this mode of convection could
119        We use multiparameter geophysical and geochemical data to show that the 110-square-kilometer a
120 ((aq)) formation was not identified based on geochemical data, but we surmise that dissolved organic
121 r quantitative comparison of geophysical and geochemical data, linked through sets of common intensiv
122 resent levels by 420-400 Ma, consistent with geochemical data.
123 ntal parameters from a statewide groundwater geochemical database and publicly available maps of soil
124 e we apply a statistical analysis to a large geochemical dataset of mafic rocks spanning the last 3.5
125                   Co-located geophysical and geochemical datasets in the borehole show a remarkably c
126 same geochemically depleted component (where geochemical depletion refers to ancient melt extraction)
127 s without knowledge of kinetic parameters or geochemical depth profiles.
128                                 Global-scale geochemical differences across the upper mantle are know
129  this chain, Loa and Kea, and the systematic geochemical differences between them have remained unexp
130 Loa-track volcanism, yielding the systematic geochemical differences observed between Loa- and Kea-ty
131 eir melt inclusions display a high degree of geochemical disequilibrium with their carrier melts at K
132 nd sediments and play a critical role in the geochemical distribution of trace elements and heavy met
133 solution microscopy to assess biological and geochemical drivers of weathering in natural settings.
134                                              Geochemical elements were enriched in cryoconite relativ
135 e characterization of water-based corrosion, geochemical, environmental and catalytic processes rely
136 t the speciation of U(IV) in low-temperature geochemical environments, inhibiting the development of
137 animals are often found in black shales with geochemical evidence for deposition in marine environmen
138 cling throughout Earth's history, yet direct geochemical evidence for mantle reprocessing remains elu
139 .31 Gyr ago, concurrent with the most recent geochemical evidence for the Great Oxidation Event.
140 he Ediacaran-Cambrian interval coincide with geochemical evidence for the modernisation of Earth's bi
141                              Whilst abundant geochemical evidence indicates repeated intervals of oce
142 hquakes, which are spatially correlated with geochemical evidence of a fluid pathway from the mantle,
143  anomaly in the upper mantle and there is no geochemical evidence of an asthenosphere mantle contribu
144 driver of hominin evolution, but most of the geochemical evidence relies on carbon isotopes (delta(13
145 or the first time, to our knowledge, we show geochemical evidence that this storage is key to the gen
146      The widely accepted paradigm of Earth's geochemical evolution states that the successive extract
147  cycling has been widely used to reconstruct geochemical evolutions of paleoenvironments.
148  column but neglect to consider physical and geochemical factors and contributions from the sediment.
149 robial community responses to alterations in geochemical factors beyond the bulk phase.
150                              Our insights on geochemical factors influencing aqueous mercury speciati
151 nd complexity associated with biological and geochemical factors influencing Dhc activity.
152 he engineered E. coli is affected by various geochemical factors relevant to geothermal fluids, inclu
153                                              Geochemical factors that control the structural order of
154 as the metabolic potential to adapt to local geochemical factors which dictate the community assembly
155  grouping pattern is associated with several geochemical factors, and structures of not only the enti
156 ibution of Fe(III) photoreduction to the bio-geochemical Fe redox cycle in aquatic freshwater sedimen
157                                          The geochemical findings for these teeth reinforce the uniqu
158 due to their widespread dispersal and unique geochemical fingerprints.
159 fic predictions, model results indicate that geochemical fluxes are robust indicators of microbial co
160         Exceptionally well-preserved organic geochemical fossils--biomarkers--preserved in a soil hor
161 sing Italian alabaster and provides a robust geochemical framework for provenancing, including recogn
162 l vents, microbial communities thrive across geochemical gradients above, at, and below the seafloor.
163 arth would therefore be strongly affected by geochemical gradients of E(h), pH, and temperature, and
164                                 Furthermore, geochemical gradients of pH, redox, and temperature in i
165 takes place in three steps progressing along geochemical gradients produced through microbial activit
166 cale species sorting in response to regional geochemical gradients.
167 uorescence (LSF) through the recovery of the geochemical halo from the original calamus matching the
168 mical images revealed a pronounced impact of geochemical heterogeneities concerning the reactivity of
169 und implications for the nature and scale of geochemical heterogeneities in Earth's deep mantle and s
170 isms within a single injection well owing to geochemical heterogeneity across the aquifer system.
171                       The resulting sediment geochemical heterogeneity provides a critical control on
172 iments from offshore Svalbard that represent geochemical horizons where anaerobic methanotrophy is ex
173     Variables representing geologic sources, geochemical, hydrologic, and physical features were amon
174  requires new numerical tools that integrate geochemical, hydrological, and biological processes.
175 te a new era in biosynthetic/degradation and geochemical isotopic compound studies.
176                              High-resolution geochemical, isotopic, and (14)C analyses of a sedimenta
177                 Batch mixing experiments and geochemical kinetics modeling of the associated reaction
178 olcano north of Toba, Sinabung, shows strong geochemical kinship with Toba, and zircons from recent e
179 re, we combined a variety of data, including geochemical measurements, rate measurements and molecula
180 that As release can be attributed to various geochemical mechanisms within a single injection well ow
181 Transylvanian Basin, Romania) in relation to geochemical milieu and pore water chemistry, while infer
182                                            A geochemical model was calibrated from batch reactor data
183 molecular biological, genomic, isotopic, and geochemical modeling approaches have led to new paradigm
184 alpy value necessary for improved predictive geochemical modeling of U(VI) adsorption in the environm
185      In-situ mu-CT experiments combined with geochemical modeling provide unique insight into the int
186  diffraction and scattering experiments with geochemical modeling to contribute to filling this gap.
187        Here, we combine machine learning and geochemical modeling to reveal the biogeochemical contro
188 on near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, geochemical modeling, wet chemistry soil extraction, and
189  for a wide range of elements by mechanistic geochemical modeling.
190  of Hg speciation in groundwater by means of geochemical modeling.
191                                     However, geochemical modelling and the occurrence of high (3)He/(
192                                              Geochemical modelling of the speciation of oxalates and
193                                              Geochemical models reproduce observed reaction progress
194 t for the building of robust and mechanistic geochemical models that will allow predicting the role o
195                     Finally, a late phase of geochemical modification by saline fluids is recognized.
196 ased on genetic (simple sequence repeat) and geochemical (multielement and (87)Sr/(86)Sr ratio) analy
197 distribution of surface nutrients provides a geochemical niche favorable for N2fixation, the primary
198 e of biofilms in creating spatially distinct geochemical niches that enable the co-existence of multi
199                                     Previous geochemical observations and modeling at the site sugges
200                Such combined geophysical and geochemical observations will help constrain models pred
201 a low Nb/Ta ratio) that is incompatible with geochemical observations.
202 Mars has been interpreted as indicating that geochemical or biotic activities could persist on Mars t
203 thesis, based on assessment of phylogenomic, geochemical, paleontological, and stratigraphic evidence
204 ation gene abundance and expression and site geochemical parameters (e.g., VC concentrations).
205 gle algal species, metabolites, and specific geochemical parameters can be used to unravel mixed meta
206 pling to account for temporal variability of geochemical parameters, including known shale OG geochem
207 s was investigated in seven soils of varying geochemical parameters.
208  sequencing, linking these community data to geochemical parameters.
209  (Hg) is challenging to predict as different geochemical pools of Hg may respond differently to enhan
210                                         This geochemical process is more effective than metal solutio
211 itan Archaea suggests they are mediating key geochemical processes and are specialized for survival i
212 ity, and thereby occurrences of water-driven geochemical processes in terrestrial environments.
213 es, organic syntheses, biological chemistry, geochemical processes including metal transport, coordin
214 xtension, alter the important ecological and geochemical processes it affects.
215 cterize the extent, severity, and underlying geochemical processes of groundwater arsenic (As) pollut
216 en essential to uncovering the microbial and geochemical processes that drive Earth's sulfur cycle.
217  organisms that correlate spatially with the geochemical processes they carry out.
218 lly in evaluating microbial contributions to geochemical processes through time.
219 enic, including geomorphological and organic geochemical processes.
220 ane under anoxic conditions was suggested by geochemical profiles at marine hydrocarbon seeps(1-3), a
221 so the rare subcommunity are correlated with geochemical profiles in the aquifer ecosystem.
222                                              Geochemical profiles, archaeal communities, and bacteria
223 city within the context of varying climates, geochemical properties and stone conditions.
224 position of the particles suggest that their geochemical properties may influence the extent of Zn bi
225                 This study suggests that the geochemical properties of carbonate rocks may provide su
226 lcano MV420 (420 m water depth) by analyzing geochemical properties, microbial lipids, and nucleic ac
227 ducted with two soils comprising contrasting geochemical properties.
228                             Here we measured geochemical proxies (delta(11)B and B/Ca) in Porites ast
229 ing prospect to decipher the vital effect on geochemical proxies applied to paleoceanographic reconst
230                    It is debated whether the geochemical proxies are unreliable, affected by diagenes
231        Here we combine a large collection of geochemical proxies for sea surface temperature with an
232 ear from the sulfur isotope record and other geochemical proxies that the production of oxygen or oxi
233                            Using a series of geochemical proxies, a model to describe variable H(2) c
234 precision U-Pb geochronology, and additional geochemical proxies, for a range of environmental proxie
235                      This study utilizes the geochemical proxy and N isotope record of the Ediacaran-
236 bitats in the Iberian Basin, integrated with geochemical proxy data (delta(13)C and delta(18)O), to i
237 tructions as they can considerably alter the geochemical proxy signatures in calcareous skeletal stru
238  and locations of susceptible groundwater, a geochemical reaction model that included pure Pb mineral
239 w, heat transport, solute transport, and the geochemical reaction network to fully reproduce the Eh o
240 d successfully captures the evolution of the geochemical reactions and morphology of the fracture.
241 rstanding fracture alteration resulting from geochemical reactions is critical in predicting fluid mi
242 proach to analyze and upscale the ESA during geochemical reactions, which are involved in a wide rang
243 properties and CO(2)-enriched brine-dolomite geochemical reactions.
244 their translation into enzymes that catalyze geochemical reactions.
245                                              Geochemical reactive transport modelling, constrained by
246 s about both the possible occurrence and the geochemical reactivity of such As-bearing pyrites in low
247                          Here we analyse the geochemical record and timing of the Pacific Ocean Large
248                                  Much of the geochemical record of recent anthropogenic activity has
249 oint, independently documented in the global geochemical record of rhyolites, at which rhyolitic melt
250             Our equatorial coccolith-derived geochemical record thus highlights an important period o
251                           In addition, these geochemical records combined with previously published m
252                           In this study, the geochemical records from two adjacent alpine bogs in the
253                             However, current geochemical records lack the temporal resolution to addr
254           Holistic integration of fossil and geochemical records leads us to challenge the notion tha
255                          Here we present new geochemical records of terrigenous dust accumulating on
256 roduce homogeneous, flux-free glass beads of geochemical reference materials (GRMs), uranium ores, an
257 tween particle microhabitats and surrounding geochemical regimes is a strong selective force shaping
258 markers and proxies that may establish novel geochemical relationships between archaeal ether lipids
259 has been subject of a longstanding debate in geochemical research and pollutant forensics because its
260 unity are interconnected through exchange of geochemical resources.
261                                              Geochemical results suggest that magmatism before 107 Ma
262                                    Inorganic geochemical results, as shown by increasing values of Si
263 building blocks in the same local primordial geochemical scenario.
264 iron (oxyhydr)oxides, a model system for the geochemical sequestration of radiotoxic actinides.
265  Centimeters of soil depth and corresponding geochemical shifts consistently affected microbial commu
266  oceans, which allow large and nonreversible geochemical shifts to arise from relatively small change
267 rothermal system controlling geophysical and geochemical signals at the caldera.
268  during the Archaean eon would have produced geochemical signals identical to those used to date the
269       How this biological similarity affects geochemical signals, and their interpretations, has yet
270                                     A unique geochemical signature overlaps with the southeastern flo
271 with thicker eggshell and a partly different geochemical signature than those from the egg-bearing la
272 lting ecosystem oscillations induce a unique geochemical signature within the ODZ-short-lived spikes
273 ts 10 and 19 km upstream of a reservoir left geochemical signatures in sediments and porewaters corre
274 ure of the lithosphere is illuminated by the geochemical signatures of metasomatised mantle rocks and
275 elta(13)C), oxygen isotope (delta(18)O), and geochemical signatures of weathering intensity reveal a
276         Both procedures are demonstrated for geochemical soil data sets from Europe, Australia, and t
277 ent that enters the biosphere primarily from geochemical sources, but also through anthropogenic acti
278 dicting the mobility and toxicity of Hg, but geochemical speciation codes have not yet been tested fo
279 the demise of ferruginous oceans, but recent geochemical studies show that ferruginous conditions per
280 ability of U before and after stimulation, a geochemical study of U speciation was carried out on thr
281 ution of the primary lunar crust is based on geochemical systematics from the lunar ferroan anorthosi
282 ty species during the long term evolution of geochemical systems, even in oxygen-limited environments
283 tu experiments for studying fractionation in geochemical systems.
284            The gel-based method enriches our geochemical toolbox by enabling detailed characterizatio
285              Thus, it is essential to find a geochemical tracer to establish where upwellings are con
286 Oxygen Minimum Zone expansion as revealed by geochemical tracers and the onset of upwelling reflected
287                      Here, we use diagnostic geochemical tracers combined with groundwater residence
288 ity of rare-earth elements (REEs) as natural geochemical tracers for the analysis of groundwater reme
289                                  Analysis of geochemical tracers for understanding in situ remediatio
290 reasing stream water concentrations of known geochemical tracers of OG extraction, and the compositio
291 hemical parameters, including known shale OG geochemical tracers, and microbial and benthic macroinve
292 en the intensity of OG development, shale OG geochemical tracers, or benthic macroinvertebrate or mic
293 al dissolution can contribute to the overall geochemical transformation kinetics of nanoparticle in s
294 mmonium transition zone (NATZ), a widespread geochemical transition zone where most of the upward amm
295                                            A geochemical/transport model was used to simultaneously m
296  largest monitored seismic, deformation, and geochemical unrest at the caldera.
297      PHREEQC mixing calculations and spatial geochemical variations suggest that the Ra in the oil-fi
298 mantle and are a major gateway in the global geochemical water cycle.
299  analysis of palynological (chitinozoan) and geochemical (XRF) data, to evaluate whether the limeston
300 rate of the degradation process in different geochemical zones remain elusive.

 
Page Top