myResearchSpace

                              An Online Community for Researchers and Research Students           

Welcome to myResearchSpace Sign in | Join | Help
in Search
Graduate Research School logo University of Western Australia logo

Browse by Tags

All Tags » reading » journal club
Showing page 1 of 3 (23 total posts)
  • Next journal club meeting - carbon in China

    The next meeting (already notified by Talitha) is on Tuesday 7 July, 1pm, second-floor lunch area, Soil Science building, UWA. The article to be mused upon is :Piao S, Fang J, Ciais P, Peylin P, Huang Y, Sitch S, Wang T. 2009. Carbon balance of terrestrial ecosystems in China. Nature, 458:1009-1014.
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on July 1, 2009
  • Small data set, high impact

    [Musings by Talitha Santini] The first article for the revived Journal Club was ‘Jarosite as an indicator of water-limited chemical weathering on Mars' (Elwood Madden et al. [2004] Nature, 431:821-823), chosen by Talitha because it was a short and reasonably simple article about soils on another planet. The authors used observations of ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on June 11, 2009
  • Journal club revived

    [Edit at 29 May 2009 - the date has been shifted to Wednesday 3 June]   The poster at right was prepared by Talitha to publicise the first meeting of the Soil Science Journal Club for 2009...   ...we'll be discussing the article: Madden MEE, Bodnar RJ, Rimstidt JD. 2004. Jarosite as an indicator of water-limited chemical ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on May 18, 2009
  • Digging for gold

    Musings on:Anand RR, Cornelius M, Phang C, 2007. Use of vegetation and soil in mineral exploration in areas of transported overburden, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia: a contribution towards understanding metal transportation processes.Geochemistry-Exploration Environment Analysis, 7: 267-288. The use of soils and vegetation as sample media for ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on November 6, 2008
  • New Comment on A Soil Scientist's Lament

    A new Comment has been posted in reply to A soil scientist's lament, by Professor Philippe Baveye (the author of the article mused upon in the original post). It's well worth reading. You can get to it by clicking here, too (scroll down to the bottom of the page).
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on October 24, 2008
  • the soil on Mars

    ...musings on Amundson R, Ewing S, Dietrich W, Sutter B, Owen J, Chadwick OA, Nishiizumi K, Walvoord M, McKay C. 2008. On the in situ aqueous alteration of soils on Mars. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72:3845-3864. It's great when an article related to one's own discipline is about something exotic, and it would be hard to imagine a more exotic ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on September 2, 2008
  • Urban soil habitats

    Musings on:Byrne LB, 2007. Habitat structure: A fundamental concept and framework for urban soil ecology. Urban Ecosystems, 10:255-274. The title's claim of a ''fundamental concept and framework'' are ambitious, and this paper has a few shortcomings that leave it falling somewhat short of such lofty goals. Despite this, the stated overall ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on February 6, 2008
  • Briefs

    Trevors, J.T. and Saier, M.H., Jr. (2007). Academics and their knowledge are underutilized. Water, Air and Soil Pollution, 186:1-2. ''Scientists and other academics are generally underutilized in numerous ways. For example, many scientists who also serve as instructors are not provided with the best infrastructure for use in teaching ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on December 20, 2007
  • Too much carbon... in soils, now?

    Musings on:Stewart CE, Paustian K, Conant RT, Plant AF, Six A. 2007. Soil carbon saturation: concept, evidence and evaluation. Biogeochemistry 86:19-31. On first glance I thought that this was too obvious to be significant - if carbon input fluxes (e.g. litter fall) are increased (in a single step), then of course soil carbon will increase, but ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on November 1, 2007
  • Globally consistent nitrogen release (backlog No. 2)

    Article for 2 July 2007:Parton W, Silver WL, Burke IC, Grassens L, Harmon ME, Currie WS, King JY, Adair EC, Brandt LA, Hart SC, Fasth B, 2007. Global-scale similarities in nitrogen release patterns during long-term decomposition. Science 315:361-364. Finding a global pattern in nature would be a worthy achievement for any scientist, and this is ...
    Posted to Soil Science Journal Club (Weblog) by Andrew.Rate on September 18, 2007
1 2 3 Next >
Powered by Community Server, by Telligent Systems