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Author

Céline Dessert

Bio: Céline Dessert is an academic researcher from Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Weathering & Volcano. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 35 publications receiving 2135 citations. Previous affiliations of Céline Dessert include Paul Sabatier University & Paris Diderot University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the chemical weathering of basalts and the flux of carbon transferred from the atmosphere to the ocean during this major process at the surface of the Earth were investigated.

762 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of the Deccan Traps on chemical weathering and atmospheric CO2 consumption on Earth is evaluated based on the study of major elements, strontium and 87Sr/86Sr isotopic ratios of the main rivers flowing through the traps, using a numerical model.

434 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Dupre et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the dependence of chemical weathering on environmental parameters, such as climate and mechanical erosion, and established a simple weathering law for basaltic lithologies.

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the weathering of a 6×106 km2 basaltic province located within the equatorial region is sufficient to trigger a snowball glaciation, assuming a pre-perturbation PCO2 value of 280 ppmv.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jérôme Gaillardet1, Isabelle Braud, Fatim Hankard1, Sandrine Anquetin2, Olivier Bour3, Nathalie Dörfliger, J.-R. de Dreuzy3, Sylvie Galle2, C. Galy4, Sébastien Gogo5, Laurence Gourcy, Florence Habets6, F. Laggoun5, Laurent Longuevergne3, T. Le Borgne3, Florence Naaim-Bouvet2, Guillaume Nord2, V. Simonneaux, Delphine Six2, Tiphaine Tallec, Christian Valentin5, Gwenaël Abril, P. Allemand5, A. Arènes, Bruno Arfib7, Laurent Arnaud2, N. Arnaud5, P. Arnaud, Stéphane Audry5, V. Bailly Comte, C. Batiot5, Annick Battais3, Hervé Bellot2, Eric Bernard, Catherine Bertrand5, H. Bessière, Stéphane Binet5, J. Bodin5, Xavier Bodin, Laurie Boithias5, Julien Bouchez1, Brice Boudevillain2, I. Bouzou Moussa, Flora Branger, Jean-Jacques Braun5, Pascal Brunet5, B. Caceres, Damien Calmels8, Bernard Cappelaere5, Hélène Celle-Jeanton5, François Chabaux, Konstantinos Chalikakis9, Cédric Champollion5, Yoann Copard10, C. Cotel, Philippe Davy3, Philip Deline, Guy Delrieu2, Jérôme Demarty5, Céline Dessert1, Marie Dumont5, Christophe Emblanch9, J. Ezzahar11, Michel Esteves2, Vincent Favier2, Mikael Faucheux12, Naziano Filizola, P. Flammarion, P. Floury1, Ophélie Fovet12, Matthieu Fournier10, André-Jean Francez3, Laure Gandois13, Chantal Gascuel12, E. Gayer1, Christophe Genthon2, Marie-Françoise Gérard3, Daniel Gilbert5, Isabelle Gouttevin5, Manuela Grippa5, Gérard Gruau3, Abderrahim Jardani10, Laurent Jeanneau3, J. L. Join, Hervé Jourde5, Fatima Karbou5, David Labat5, Yvan Lagadeuc3, Eric Lajeunesse1, Roland Lastennet, Waldo Lavado, E. Lawin, Thierry Lebel2, C. Le Bouteiller2, Cédric Legout2, Yves Lejeune5, E. Le Meur2, N. Le Moigne10, J. Lions, Antoine Lucas1, Jean-Philippe Malet, Claire Marais-Sicre, Jean-Christophe Maréchal, Christelle Marlin5, P. Martin5, Jean M.F. Martins2, Jean-Michel Martinez5, Nicolas Massei10, A. Mauclerc, Naomi Mazzilli9, Jérôme Molénat14, Patricia Moreira-Turcq5, Eric Mougin5, S. Morin5, J.R. Ndam Ngoupayou15, Gérémy Panthou2, Christophe Peugeot5, Ghislain Picard2, Marie-Claire Pierret, Gilles Porel, Anne Probst13, Jean-Luc Probst13, Antoine Rabatel2, Damien Raclot14, Ludovic Ravanel, Fayçal Rejiba10, P. René, Olivier Ribolzi5, Jean Riotte5, Agnès Rivière16, Henri Robain5, Laurent Ruiz12, José-Miguel Sánchez-Pérez13, William Santini5, Sabine Sauvage13, Philippe Schoeneich2, Jean-Luc Seidel5, Muddu Sekhar17, Oloth Sengtaheuanghoung, Norbert Silvera5, Marc Steinmann5, Alvaro Soruco18, Gaëlle Tallec, Emmanuel Thibert2, D. Valdes Lao6, C. Vincent2, Daniel Viville, Patrick Wagnon2, R. Zitouna 
TL;DR: The OZCAR-RI project as discussed by the authors is a network of instrumented sites, bringing together 21 pre-existing research observatories monitoring different compartments of the zone situated between “the rock and the sky,” the Earth's skin or critical zone (CZ), over the long term.
Abstract: The French critical zone initiative, called OZCAR (Observatoires de la Zone Critique–Application et Recherche or Critical Zone Observatories–Application and Research) is a National Research Infrastructure (RI). OZCAR-RI is a network of instrumented sites, bringing together 21 pre-existing research observatories monitoring different compartments of the zone situated between “the rock and the sky,” the Earth’s skin or critical zone (CZ), over the long term. These observatories are regionally based and have specific initial scientific questions, monitoring strategies, databases, and modeling activities. The diversity of OZCAR-RI observatories and sites is well representative of the heterogeneity of the CZ and of the scientific communities studying it. Despite this diversity, all OZCAR-RI sites share a main overarching mandate, which is to monitor, understand, and predict (“earthcast”) the fluxes of water and matter of the Earth’s near surface and how they will change in response to the “new climatic regime.” The vision for OZCAR strategic development aims at designing an open infrastructure, building a national CZ community able to share a systemic representation of the CZ , and educating a new generation of scientists more apt to tackle the wicked problem of the Anthropocene. OZCAR articulates around: (i) a set of common scientific questions and cross-cutting scientific activities using the wealth of OZCAR-RI observatories, (ii) an ambitious instrumental development program, and (iii) a better interaction between data and models to integrate the different time and spatial scales. Internationally, OZCAR-RI aims at strengthening the CZ community by providing a model of organization for pre-existing observatories and by offering CZ instrumented sites. OZCAR is one of two French mirrors of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructure (eLTER-ESFRI) project.

119 citations


Cited by
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Journal Article
TL;DR: Denman et al. as discussed by the authors presented the Couplings between changes in the climate system and biogeochemistry Coordinating Lead Authors: Kenneth L. Denman (Canada), Guy Brasseur (USA, Germany), Amnat Chidthaisong (Thailand), Philippe Ciais (France), Peter M. Cox (UK), Robert E. Austin (USA), D.B. Wofsy (USA) and Xiaoye Zhang (China).
Abstract: Couplings Between Changes in the Climate System and Biogeochemistry Coordinating Lead Authors: Kenneth L. Denman (Canada), Guy Brasseur (USA, Germany) Lead Authors: Amnat Chidthaisong (Thailand), Philippe Ciais (France), Peter M. Cox (UK), Robert E. Dickinson (USA), Didier Hauglustaine (France), Christoph Heinze (Norway, Germany), Elisabeth Holland (USA), Daniel Jacob (USA, France), Ulrike Lohmann (Switzerland), Srikanthan Ramachandran (India), Pedro Leite da Silva Dias (Brazil), Steven C. Wofsy (USA), Xiaoye Zhang (China) Contributing Authors: D. Archer (USA), V. Arora (Canada), J. Austin (USA), D. Baker (USA), J.A. Berry (USA), R. Betts (UK), G. Bonan (USA), P. Bousquet (France), J. Canadell (Australia), J. Christian (Canada), D.A. Clark (USA), M. Dameris (Germany), F. Dentener (EU), D. Easterling (USA), V. Eyring (Germany), J. Feichter (Germany), P. Friedlingstein (France, Belgium), I. Fung (USA), S. Fuzzi (Italy), S. Gong (Canada), N. Gruber (USA, Switzerland), A. Guenther (USA), K. Gurney (USA), A. Henderson-Sellers (Switzerland), J. House (UK), A. Jones (UK), C. Jones (UK), B. Karcher (Germany), M. Kawamiya (Japan), K. Lassey (New Zealand), C. Le Quere (UK, France, Canada), C. Leck (Sweden), J. Lee-Taylor (USA, UK), Y. Malhi (UK), K. Masarie (USA), G. McFiggans (UK), S. Menon (USA), J.B. Miller (USA), P. Peylin (France), A. Pitman (Australia), J. Quaas (Germany), M. Raupach (Australia), P. Rayner (France), G. Rehder (Germany), U. Riebesell (Germany), C. Rodenbeck (Germany), L. Rotstayn (Australia), N. Roulet (Canada), C. Sabine (USA), M.G. Schultz (Germany), M. Schulz (France, Germany), S.E. Schwartz (USA), W. Steffen (Australia), D. Stevenson (UK), Y. Tian (USA, China), K.E. Trenberth (USA), T. Van Noije (Netherlands), O. Wild (Japan, UK), T. Zhang (USA, China), L. Zhou (USA, China) Review Editors: Kansri Boonpragob (Thailand), Martin Heimann (Germany, Switzerland), Mario Molina (USA, Mexico) This chapter should be cited as: Denman, K.L., G. Brasseur, A. Chidthaisong, P. Ciais, P.M. Cox, R.E. Dickinson, D. Hauglustaine, C. Heinze, E. Holland, D. Jacob, U. Lohmann, S Ramachandran, P.L. da Silva Dias, S.C. Wofsy and X. Zhang, 2007: Couplings Between Changes in the Climate System and Biogeochemistry. In: Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Solomon, S., D. Qin, M. Manning, Z. Chen, M. Marquis, K.B. Averyt, M.Tignor and H.L. Miller (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA.

2,208 citations

Book
24 Feb 2011
TL;DR: The Global River Database as mentioned in this paper is a collection of river data from North and Central America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania with a focus on flooding and erosion.
Abstract: Foreword 1. Introduction 2. Runoff, erosion and delivery to the coastal ocean 3. Temporal variations 4. Human impacts Appendices. Global River Database: Appendix A: North and Central America Appendix B: South America Appendix C: Europe Appendix D: Africa Appendix E: Eurasia Appendix F: Asia Appendix G: Oceania References Index.

1,046 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Robert A. Berner1
TL;DR: Berner et al. as discussed by the authors presented a model for the combined long-term cycles of carbon and sulfur which combines all the factors modifying weathering and degassing of the GEOCARB III model.

914 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Nov 2019-Nature
TL;DR: The capture and use of carbon dioxide to create valuable products might lower the net costs of reducing emissions or removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, but barriers to implementation remain substantial and resource constraints prevent the simultaneous deployment of all pathways.
Abstract: The capture and use of carbon dioxide to create valuable products might lower the net costs of reducing emissions or removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Here we review ten pathways for the utilization of carbon dioxide. Pathways that involve chemicals, fuels and microalgae might reduce emissions of carbon dioxide but have limited potential for its removal, whereas pathways that involve construction materials can both utilize and remove carbon dioxide. Land-based pathways can increase agricultural output and remove carbon dioxide. Our assessment suggests that each pathway could scale to over 0.5 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide utilization annually. However, barriers to implementation remain substantial and resource constraints prevent the simultaneous deployment of all pathways. Ten pathways for the utilization of carbon dioxide are reviewed, considering their potential scale, economics and barriers to implementation.

879 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a compilation of chemical and physical erosion rates in small catchments and show that silicate weathering rates are not governed by any single parameter but require consideration in multiple dimensions.

817 citations