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Harry L. Jenter

Researcher at United States Geological Survey

Publications -  7
Citations -  968

Harry L. Jenter is an academic researcher from United States Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Geobacter & Pelobacter. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 942 citations. Previous affiliations of Harry L. Jenter include University of Massachusetts Amherst.

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Phylogenetic analysis of dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing bacteria.

TL;DR: The suggestion, based on geological evidence, that Fe(III) reduction was the first globally significant process for oxidizing organic matter back to carbon dioxide is consistent with the finding that acetate-oxidizing Fe( III) reducers are phylogenetically diverse.
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Isolation of Geobacter species from diverse sedimentary environments.

TL;DR: The isolation of five new strains which could obtain energy for growth by dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction from freshwater aquatic sediments, a pristine deep aquifer, and a petroleum-contaminated shallow aquifer demonstrates that Geobacter species are widely distributed in a diversity of sedimentary environments in which Fe( III) reduction is an important process.
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Desulfuromonas palmitatis sp. nov., a marine dissimilatory Fe(III) reducer that can oxidize long-chain fatty acids

TL;DR: D. palmitatis is only the second marine organism found (after D. acetoxidans) to oxidize multicarbon organic compounds completely to carbon dioxide with Fe(III) as an electron acceptor and provides the first pure culture model for the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids coupled to Fe( III) reduction.
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Drag coefficients for modeling flow through emergent vegetation in the Florida Everglades

TL;DR: In this article, hydraulic data collected in a flume fitted with pans of sawgrass were analyzed to determine the vertically averaged vegetation drag coefficient as a function of vegetation characteristics, such as the stem population per unit bed area and the average stem/leaf width.
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Observations of tidal flux between a submersed aquatic plant stand and the adjacent channel in the Potomac River near Washington, D.C.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of the macrophyte stand on flow and mass exchange in the tidal Potomac River were investigated using dye injection and direct velocity and water-level measurements.