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A. Rob MacKenzie
Researcher at University of Birmingham
Publications - 27
Citations - 756
A. Rob MacKenzie is an academic researcher from University of Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Biology. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications receiving 525 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Model–data synthesis for the next generation of forest free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiments
Richard J. Norby,Martin G. De Kauwe,Tomas F. Domingues,Remko A. Duursma,David S. Ellsworth,Daniel S. Goll,David M. Lapola,K. A. Luus,A. Rob MacKenzie,Belinda E. Medlyn,Belinda E. Medlyn,Ryan Pavlick,Anja Rammig,Anja Rammig,Benjamin Smith,Rick M. Thomas,Kirsten Thonicke,Anthony P. Walker,Xiaojuan Yang,Soenke Zaehle +19 more
TL;DR: Five new forest free-air CO2 enrichment experiments in mature forests in different biomes and over a wide range of climate space and biodiversity will significantly expand the inference space, and a unique opportunity to initiate a model-data interaction as an integral part of experimental design is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
Scenario Archetypes: Converging Rather than Diverging Themes
Dexter V. L. Hunt,D. Rachel Lombardi,Stuart Atkinson,Austin Barber,Matthew J. Barnes,Christopher T. Boyko,Julie Brown,John R. Bryson,David Butler,Silvio Caputo,Maria Caserio,Richard Coles,Rachel Cooper,Raziyeh Farmani,Mark Gaterell,James D. Hale,Chantal Hales,C. Nicholas Hewitt,Lubo Jankovic,Ian Jefferson,Joanne M. Leach,A. Rob MacKenzie,Fayyaz Ali Memon,Jon P. Sadler,Carina Weingaertner,J. Duncan Whyatt,Christopher D. F. Rogers +26 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that four of these scenario archetypes are sufficiently distinct to facilitate active stakeholder engagement in futures thinking and are accompanied by a well-established, internally consistent set of narratives that provide a deeper understanding of the key fundamental drivers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using green infrastructure to improve urban air quality (GI4AQ)
TL;DR: A novel conceptual framework is set out explaining how and where GI can improve air quality, and six specific policy interventions are offered, underpinned by research, that will always allow GI to improveAir quality GI4AQ.
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High‐frequency monitoring of catchment nutrient exports reveals highly variable storm event responses and dynamic source zone activation
Phillip J. Blaen,Kieran Khamis,Charlotte E M Lloyd,Sophie Comer-Warner,Francesco Ciocca,Rick M. Thomas,A. Rob MacKenzie,Stefan Krause +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, an 8-month high-frequency time series of streamflow, nitrate (NO3-N), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and hydroclimatic variables for a headwater agricultural catchment was used to identify and characterise time-dynamic source zone contributions severely hampers the adequate design of land-use management practices in order to control nutrient exports from agricultural landscapes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mapping and quantifying isomer sets of hydrocarbons ( ≥ C 12 ) in diesel exhaust, lubricating oil and diesel fuel samples using GC × GC-ToF-MS
M. S. Alam,Soheil Zeraati-Rezaei,Zhirong Liang,Christopher Stark,Hongming Xu,A. Rob MacKenzie,Roy M. Harrison,Roy M. Harrison +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive 2D gas chromatography time-of-flight mass-spectrometry (GC-ToF-MS) was used to identify isomer sets of hydrocarbons in diesel fuel, lubricating oil and diesel exhaust emissions.