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Atun Zawadzki

Researcher at Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

Publications -  86
Citations -  1806

Atun Zawadzki is an academic researcher from Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Wetland. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 82 publications receiving 1298 citations.

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Wetland carbon storage controlled by millennial-scale variation in relative sea-level rise

TL;DR: It is suggested that coastal wetlands characteristic of tectonically stable coastlines have lower carbon storage owing to a lack of accommodation space and that carbon sequestration increases according to the vertical and lateral accommodation space created by RSLR.
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Seventy years of continuous encroachment substantially increases 'blue carbon' capacity as mangroves replace intertidal salt marshes.

TL;DR: This study track the continuous, lateral encroachment of mangroves into two south-eastern Australian salt marshes over a period of 70 years and quantify corresponding changes in biomass and belowground C stores.
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The hydrological legacy of deforestation on global wetlands

TL;DR: Using a combination of different approaches, Woodward et al. show that ancient and more recent deforestation has resulted in major changes in global wetland hydrology, including creation of new wetlands or increased the water level in existing wetlands in Australia and New Zealand.
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Atmospheric pollutants in alpine peat bogs record a detailed chronology of industrial and agricultural development on the Australian continent.

TL;DR: In this article, two peat bogs from remote alpine sites in Australia were found to contain detailed and coherent histories of atmospheric metal pollution for Pb, Zn, Cu, Mo, Ag, As, Cd, Sb, In, Cr, Ni, Tl and V.
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Historical trends in trace metal and sediment accumulation in intertidal sediments of Moreton Bay, southeast Queensland, Australia

TL;DR: In this article, a geochronology of the past 150 years using short-lived radionuclides 210Pb and 137Cs was established using four sediment cores collected from intertidal areas in Moreton Bay, southeast Queensland, Australia.