D
Dana R. Kester
Researcher at University of Rhode Island
Publications - 76
Citations - 3383
Dana R. Kester is an academic researcher from University of Rhode Island. The author has contributed to research in topics: Seawater & Ionic strength. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 76 publications receiving 3272 citations. Previous affiliations of Dana R. Kester include Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Solubility of hydrous ferric oxide and iron speciation in seawater
Robert H. Byrne,Dana R. Kester +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the iron solubility equilibria were investigated in seawater at 36.22‰ salinity and 25°C using several filtration and dialysis techniques.
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Gulf Stream cold-core rings: Their physics, chemistry, and biology
Richard H. Backus,Glenn R. Flierl,Dana R. Kester,Donald B. Olson,Philip L. Richardson,Andrew C. Vastano,Peter H. Wiebe,John H. Wormuth +7 more
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Hydrogen peroxide measurement in seawater by (p-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid dimerization
William L. Miller,Dana R. Kester +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the dimerization of (p-hydroxyphenyl)acetic acid by hydrogen peroxide in the presence of peroxidase has been adapted to the determination of HPO in seawater.
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Photochemical redox cycling of iron in coastal seawater
TL;DR: In this paper, the first direct measurements of photochemical iron reduction in natural seawater at pH 8 in a controlled laboratory setting were provided, showing that the peak concentration of Fe(II) ranged from 4 to 8% of the total iron concentration.
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The dissolution of atmospheric iron in surface seawater of the open ocean
TL;DR: A series of leaching experiments designed to determine the soluble fraction of atmospheric iron in seawater was conducted as discussed by the authors, and the results from these experiments indicated that for all marine aerosol samples collected in 1986 at four island stations (Midway, Oahu, Enewetak, and Fanning) of SEAREX (Sea-Air Exchange) and in May 1988 at station 4 (33.3°N, 139.1°W) of VERTEX (Vertical Transport and Exchange) were leached by surface seawater collected from the North Pacific and S