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1 ude larger than what is found in the surface waters.
2 Cl(2) to occur above pH 7 in high-alkalinity waters.
3 tial fraction of the carbon cycled by inland waters.
4 a marked exception to phosphate-poor natural waters.
5 etreating where ice is exposed to warm ocean waters.
6 ent, chemicals and nutrients into over-lying waters.
7 hen modeling photobleaching rates in natural waters.
8 nts also suggests a source region in shallow waters.
9 des controls Fe availability in many natural waters.
10 ve strengths were produced in iron-deficient waters.
11 rd Nd isotope values more typical of Pacific waters.
12 cted to warm, deoxygenate, and acidify ocean waters.
13 highly dynamic accumulation in oxic surface waters.
14 undly impact the trophic status of temperate waters.
15 pecies sampled appeared restricted to Arctic waters.
16 ed NPP and standing stock observed in warmer waters.
17 rate floods and convert them into productive waters.
18 ed organic matter (DOM) isolates and natural waters.
19 ern waters and the opposite in cold northern waters.
20 he analysis of two spiked river and two lake waters.
21 roduction and bioaccumulation in high Arctic waters.
22 sk from enteric pathogens in sewage-impacted waters.
23 ss that will span several decades in natural waters.
24 to a significant buildup of sulfide in pore waters.
25 y contributing to carbon export from surface waters.
26 about the photoreactivity of Adirondack lake waters.
27 e life history strategies found in shallower waters.
28 stratification, and more stabilized surface waters.
29 e risk assessment of DA-contaminated natural waters.
30 r, wastewater, irrigation water, and surface waters.
31 erable species at kilometre scale in coastal waters.
32 as then applied to AFFF-contaminated surface waters.
33 ing accurate photobleaching rates in natural waters.
34 utrient and organic matter inputs to surface waters.
35 ounts, which do not affect the surface ocean waters.
36 o supply large quantities of Fe to overlying waters.
37 a model Fe INP, suspended in filtered field waters.
38 stance against dissolution in more corrosive waters.
39 tarctic soils and in the surrounding oceanic waters.
40 shallow coastal area within the Inner Danish waters.
41 s observed between NOM and IEX resin in real waters.
42 srupting characteristics of different source waters.
43 ature, sea level and salinity across coastal waters.
44 be a major pollutant source to urban surface waters.
45 norovirus (NoV) densities in ambient surface waters.
46 on the amended site can be low in turbulent waters.
47 creen lotions, rainwaters, and swimming pool waters.
48 of their transformation products in surface waters.
49 e estimates for northern mid-latitude bottom waters.
50 rivers could have been mineralized in inland waters.
51 s an important source of nitrogen to coastal waters.
52 monitoring of contaminants in environmental waters.
53 e inactivation of viral pathogens in surface waters.
54 lectivity for use in either blood or surface waters.
55 derstand the variability of AQY-M in natural waters.
56 hen magadiite precipitated in shallow saline waters.
57 to 20 times higher than that found in marine waters.
58 o anthropogenic copper inputs into protected waters.
59 ficient and faster than in areas with cooler waters.
60 abundances of species associated with warmer waters.
61 persistence of pollutants in sunlit surface waters.
62 icotinoids has led to their proliferation in waters.
63 lengths) were quantified in underlying bulk waters.
64 to increasing nutrient starvation of surface waters.
65 se osmosis, for the desalination of brackish waters.
66 reduction beneath suboxic, stagnant surface waters.
67 uction process in the cold Southeast Alaskan waters.
68 as also tested in the microchip with natural waters.
69 n in the stratification of shallow nearshore waters (0-200 m), that affects both the mixed layer dept
70 s direct interactions of the ion with nearby waters, 2) the packing free energy that is the work to p
72 170-420 tonnes remain afloat in the surface waters, 49-63% ended up on coastlines, and 37-51% have s
74 s of a global survey covering 196 dry inland waters across diverse ecosystem types and climate zones.
79 the surface water layer than in intermediate waters and a negligible intrusion into deep waters (>100
80 ogen Vibrio vulnificus inhabits warm coastal waters and asymptomatically colonizes seafood, most comm
81 waters fell within ranges reported for whole waters and DOM isolates from various sources, while Phi(
82 isotopes show promise for tracking formation waters and for understanding water-rock interaction unde
83 versity leaders were thrust into unchartered waters and forced them to make unprecedented decisions.
84 , and physical properties) measured in these waters and found that the profiles covaried with at most
86 hat is, macro- and megafauna) living in deep waters and in benthic habitats, whereas monitoring of ec
88 is widespread in North Atlantic and adjacent waters and is one of the most abundant vertebrates on ea
89 ilder conditions than the frigid surrounding waters and it could be an ideal location for newly intro
90 n processes from hyperpolarized "structural" waters and labile side-chain protons; and the possibilit
91 thin ice moderates iron delivery to offshore waters and likely also affects the subsequent ocean iron
92 formed abiotically on the surface in shallow waters and on continents during the Archean eon in the a
93 Secondary Fe oxyhydroxides forming in inflow waters and on creek beds have V K-edge XANES spectra exh
94 mineral-related activities in international waters and protecting the marine environment from the ha
95 s and guiding threat assessments in offshore waters and represent an important initial step towards q
96 enarios of future nutrient loading to inland waters and show that enhanced eutrophication of lakes an
98 and revealed temperate and tropical surface waters and the Arctic as biodiversity hotspots and mecha
100 anged from Papua New Guinea to sub-Antarctic waters and to Western Australia, highlighting connectivi
102 wo bacteriophages-MS2 and phiX174-in surface waters and waste stabilization ponds by integrating sola
103 inct from the communities of the surrounding waters, and a few plastic-degrading microorganisms have
105 Ce-NPs were ubiquitously detected in surface waters, and their presence was related to a high natural
106 No interferences were observed from surface waters, and there was no match between bitumen-influence
107 th freshwaters, Hg methylation in open ocean waters appears less restricted to anoxic environments.
111 hy and the rate at which well-mixed boundary waters are exchanged with the stratified ocean interior.
112 Changes in carbon-14 age of intermediate waters are in phase with peaks in Cordilleran ice-rafted
114 change-driven increases in SSTs for tropical waters are predicted to cause increased stratification,
115 the diffuse solar illumination of shallower waters-are conspicuous when illuminated by directed biol
117 ere collected between 2006 and 2015 from the waters around the Lizard Island reef platform in Eastern
119 f irrigation, recreation, and other types of waters, as well in watershed-scale microbial water quali
121 platforms for bacterial pathogens in ambient waters at the point of sample collection are urgently ne
122 Although CH(4) accumulation in oxic surface waters became apparent in recent years, the sources are
123 finding is important to OGW-impacted source waters because drinking water plants with high-bromide s
124 he glendonites of the Danish Basin formed in waters below 5 degrees C, at water depths of <300 m.
125 s of plastics in catchments and transitional waters both independently as a major transport routes to
127 encies can regularly flush reefs with cooler waters, buffering the thermal stress from rising sea-sur
128 c potential is present throughout the trench waters, but is less prominent below 8000 m, perhaps indi
129 ogeochemical cycling of iron in AMD-impacted waters, but its impact on dissolved organic matter (DOM)
130 freely living in Antarctic or sub-Antarctic waters, but no established populations have been reporte
131 -oxidizing archaea (AOA) are present in deep waters, but the mechanisms that determine ecotype format
133 influences mercury retention in wetland pore waters by complexing Hg(II)(i) and decreasing the concen
134 For example, individuals could "test the waters" by first clustering for warmth (no cost), then c
135 ossess a similar chemistry to these proposed waters can be used to develop an understanding of the di
140 , and hydroxyl radicals ((*)OH), for surface waters collected from 16 representative Adirondack lakes
141 Here, we show that Marcellus Shale produced waters contain some of the heaviest Ba (high (138)Ba/(13
143 cleavable detergent, RapiGest SF Surfactant (Waters Corporation), we developed and optimized a nanopr
144 ar, and DOM processing in stratified surface waters could be attributed to photochemical transformati
146 very low concentrations of cobalt in marine waters, cyanobacteria in the genus Prochlorococcus retai
147 s may nucleate below the water table because waters depressurize as they flow from ridge to valley an
150 rophic Sargasso Sea to North America coastal waters, driven primarily by cyanobacterial diazotrophs.
152 a potential contaminant in flowback/produced waters due to the large volumes/types of chemicals injec
154 shallow water (e.g., soil water) versus deep waters (e.g., groundwater), inducing primarily flushing
155 chemistry for the Utica Shale Play produced waters (e.g., total dissolved solids = 214-283 g/L) over
161 Phi(app,(1)O(2)) for native Adirondack lake waters fell within ranges reported for whole waters and
164 isotherms in warm and relatively undisturbed waters (for example, the Central Pacific Basin) or in co
166 ncentrations of trace elements in subglacial waters from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) and the Antar
167 d microbial community beta-diversity whereas waters from the most impacted nearshore reefs in the Flo
169 ollution in rivers, lakes, and other surface waters has exceeded $1.9 trillion since 1960, and has al
171 H(4)) accumulation in oxic marine and limnic waters has redefined the role of aquatic environments in
173 oalkyl substances (PFAS) in foams on surface waters impacted by aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF).
175 here highlight an essential role of solvated waters in driving zinc coordination dynamics and transme
176 sociated with PCB-contaminated sediments and waters in protecting vulnerable fish and shellfish speci
182 conversion of warm, salty, shallow Atlantic waters into colder, fresher, deep waters that move south
183 tion but an eventual incursion of sub-Arctic waters into the North Sea re-established density-driven
184 ticide contamination in agricultural surface waters is a common phenomenon, large-scale studies deali
185 ng presence of contaminants in environmental waters is an alarming issue, not only because of their h
188 distribution of sperm whales in New Zealand waters is mainly known from whaling records or opportuni
189 the toxic potential of fluoxetine in surface waters is markedly influenced by its own metabolism in a
190 ing, acidification and deoxygenation of deep waters, leading to decreased food availability at the se
191 mes along a gradient of oxygenated to anoxic waters (<0.02 mumol/l O(2) ) in the Eastern Tropical Sou
194 Suwannee River Fulvic Acid (SRFA) and marine waters (Marine DOM) were used as a test bed for the new
197 inking water plants with high-bromide source waters may switch to chloramination to meet DBP regulati
198 ggest that episodic acidification of coastal waters might limit the ability of pueruli to locate sett
199 re uptake genes were more abundant in low-Fe waters, mirroring paradigms of low-Fe adaptation in diat
201 ntrations of aerosol components across ocean waters next to the Antarctic Peninsula, South Orkney Isl
203 n of (234)U enrichment within the subglacial waters of East Antarctica recorded the ice sheet's respo
209 highest (6.3 degrees C) compared to the cold waters of the CAA (0.7 degrees C) that were associated w
211 ompleted a 4-y expedition into the uncharted waters of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) new-dru
214 t event (i.e., a marine heatwave) in coastal waters of the northern Gulf of Mexico resulted from comp
216 ged on prey isotopically consistent with the waters of the Subtropical Convergence, Polar Front and M
217 in four demersal sharks species found in the waters of the United Kingdom and investigate whether bod
218 e most likely mechanism that generated flood waters of this magnitude on a planet whose present-day a
220 that the impact of acidification of natural waters on Fe availability will be much more pronounced w
221 hioanions such as mixing with non-geothermal waters or H(2)S degassing and oxidation with increasing
222 We show that CH(4) accumulation in surface waters originates from a highly dynamic interplay betwee
223 crystal structure containing two persistent waters predicted most of the changes in receptor affinit
224 vide was observed, with Fe deficient surface waters present beyond the shelf break, much further east
225 he dynamic range enhancement (DRE) lens of a Waters Q-IM-TOF, or the exit lens of a transfer multipol
227 tion, leading to unique assemblages in polar waters, rather than being entirely derived from southerl
229 ons of nitrite are present (e.g., in surface waters receiving reverse osmosis concentrate from potabl
231 ) microbial respiration in soils as meteoric waters recharge into the subsurface and 2) the coupled c
232 nd storage, (3) filters often clog in turbid waters, reducing the eDNA captured, and (4) grab samples
233 ults indicate that emissions from dry inland waters represent a significant and likely increasing com
234 dustrial revolution with wetlands and inland waters representing the largest source of methane to the
235 d dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in surface waters results in the formation of photochemically produ
237 ep during drinking water production, all tap waters samples, and two surface waters used for drinking
239 e of upwelled hydrothermally influenced deep waters stimulating massive phytoplankton blooms in the S
240 ample, the Central Pacific Basin) or in cold waters subject to high human pressures (for example, the
241 on, Florida over the years 2003-2015 and the waters surrounding Charleston, South Carolina over 2003-
242 ach additional ppm in atmospheric pCO(2) the waters surrounding CWC communities lose carbonate at a r
243 gurations, namely, an Agilent 6560 IMQToF, a Waters Synapt G2 possessing a TWIMS cell and a modified
244 able low temperature conditions of Antarctic waters than soils, and the fact that maximum in situ tem
245 's small protrusions in structurally ordered waters that are characteristic of the so-called "small-m
246 to its natural upwelling of carbon-enriched waters that generate corrosive conditions for local ecos
247 w Atlantic waters into colder, fresher, deep waters that move southward in the Irminger and Iceland b
248 ral sensitivity for the brightly lit surface waters that this species inhabits during its marine phas
251 y-state concentrations of (1)O(2) in surface waters, the environmental half-life of DA due to singlet
252 eorient while sinking from surface turbulent waters to a more stable environment (i.e., under the sea
253 e Carlo simulation allows highly coordinated waters to be placed on the surface of a protein while si
254 e vessels move from high-copper-contaminated waters to coastal regions with low concentrations of cop
255 carbon are annually transported from inland waters to coastal systems making rivers a critical link
258 show that rates of nutrient supply from deep waters to the photic zone have dramatically increased si
259 water and is the first part of rising tidal waters to traverse intertidal and upper tidal surfaces.
260 s were tested under five types of irrigation waters to understand the genetic, physiological, and bio
261 tracking of OSPW plumes in surface receiving waters, together with the potential for confirmation of
262 ude that intense recreational use of running waters transiently increases the anthropogenic DOM load
263 and outflow takes place), the North Atlantic Waters transport most of the ocean heat, but also nutrie
265 We simulate the eutrophication of lentic waters under scenarios of future nutrient loading to inl
267 nd composition in sea ice cores (n = 25) and waters underlying ice floes (n = 22) were assessed in th
270 s (A, AF, AP, C, BP, G, M, and Z) from river waters using polymer nano- and microfibers followed by H
272 modified Synapt G2-S QTOF mass spectrometer (Waters), we investigated the influence of relevant input
273 -covered season, MeHg concentrations in lake waters were approximately ten-fold greater than in summe
274 ormation rates of micropollutants in surface waters were examined using photochemical model calculati
275 assurance samples of OSPW diluted in surface waters were positively identified to their corresponding
278 rocess for CDOM absorption in sunlit natural waters, where it can regulate the biota's exposure to su
279 ing increased in deeper, colder, more saline waters, which are sites with increased primary productiv
281 anic carbon is eventually exported to inland waters, which is equal to 14% of the simulated net carbo
282 n the anoxic zone were lower than in surface waters, which parallels the low microbial diversity seen
283 d cavity is occupied by a cluster of ordered waters whose positions overlap the polar groups of the s
284 xyhydroxides on the acidification of natural waters will also have implications to the fate of other
285 ts support the hypothesis that warming ocean waters will restrict the habitat range of the narwhal, f
286 energy contained in the controlled mixing of waters with different salt concentrations (i.e., salinit
287 most amplified in shallow, sluggishly mixed waters with high rates of photosynthesis, and provides a
288 Heme b concentrations typically decline in waters with low iron concentrations but due to lack of f
289 e Pacific coast, upwelling brings subsurface waters with low Omega and pH to the surface where net bi
292 mparison of delta(13)C(TIC) of the oxic lake waters with the delta(13)C in the top microbial mat laye
293 relevant fraction of organic contaminants in waters, with high spatial and temporal resolutions at lo
294 higher concentrations, a toxicant in natural waters, with the relative rates of transformation betwee
295 a from the SUP05 clade often dominate anoxic waters within marine oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) where t
296 in a substantive reduction of the number of waters within the first hydration shell of Cl(-) while i
297 od submerged in saline and oxygenated marine waters worldwide is efficiently degraded by crustaceans
298 els, we project that the mean TTE in coastal waters would decrease from 7.7% to 7.2% between 2010 and
300 rol temperature and productivity in tropical waters, yet potential interactions with low frequency cl