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Geoff Nowell

Researcher at Durham University

Publications -  124
Citations -  7418

Geoff Nowell is an academic researcher from Durham University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mantle (geology) & Kimberlite. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 118 publications receiving 6600 citations. Previous affiliations of Geoff Nowell include University of Nottingham & Instituto Superior Técnico.

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Comments on Richards et al., Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 2008 “Strontium isotope evidence of Neanderthal mobility at the site of Lakonis, Greece using laser-ablation PIMMS”

TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative and analytically more robust method of correcting for isobaric interferences present during the analysis was proposed, and the tooth appears to be isotopically homogenous and within uncertainty of the value for modern seawater.
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An evaluation of Mesozoic rift-related magmatism on the margins of the Labrador Sea: Implications for rifting and passive margin asymmetry

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the early rift-related magmatism exposed around Makkovik is volumetrically and spatially limited compared to the contemporaneous rifting on the conjugate southwest Greenland margin, which is consistent with an early rifting phase dominated by simple shear rather than pure shear deformation.
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Community Diversity at Ban Lum Khao, Thailand: Isotopic Evidence from the Skeletons

TL;DR: Higham et al. as mentioned in this paper compared isotopes in human teeth with burial artifacts at a Bronze Age site in Thailand, to identify immigrants and delimit discrete social groups, and found that 110 graves were uncovered at Ban Lum Khao, which was used as a cemetery in the Bronze Age, after 1050 b.c.
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Source and pathway analysis of lead and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in Lisbon urban soils

TL;DR: While principal components analysis indicates carbonates and other calcium phases as probable factors controlling the dispersion of Pb in the urban soils, the linear models obtained from stepwise multiple regression analysis show that soil phosphorous (P) and manganese (Mn) are good predictors of the total soil Pb content.