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Jordi Garcia-Orellana

Researcher at Autonomous University of Barcelona

Publications -  136
Citations -  4669

Jordi Garcia-Orellana is an academic researcher from Autonomous University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Submarine groundwater discharge & Groundwater. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 125 publications receiving 3629 citations. Previous affiliations of Jordi Garcia-Orellana include Stony Brook University & State University of New York System.

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The GEOTRACES Intermediate Data Product 2017

Reiner Schlitzer, +313 more
- 20 Aug 2018 - 
TL;DR: The GEOTRACES Intermediate Data Product 2017 (IDP2017) as discussed by the authors is the second publicly available data product of the international GEOTrACES programme, and contains data measured and quality controlled before the end of 2016.
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Submarine groundwater discharge as a major source of nutrients to the Mediterranean Sea

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that SGD is a volumetrically important process in the MS, is of a larger magnitude than riverine discharge, and also represents a major source of dissolved inorganic nitrogen, phosphorous, and silica to the MS.
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Impact of seagrass loss and subsequent revegetation on carbon sequestration and stocks

TL;DR: In this paper, the trajectories of carbon stocks associated with one of the longest monitored seagrass restoration projects globally were reconstructed and it was shown that sediment carbon stocks erode following seagranass loss and that revegetation projects effectively restore seagrase carbon sequestration capacity.
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Uncertainties associated with 223Ra and 224Ra measurements in water via a Delayed Coincidence Counter (RaDeCC)

TL;DR: In this paper, the uncertainties associated with 223Ra and 224Ra measurements using a Radium Delayed Coincidence Counter are determined on a detailed error propagation basis with a confidence interval of 1σ.
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River Deltas as hotspots of microplastic accumulation: The case study of the Ebro River (NW Mediterranean)

TL;DR: The main contribution of this study is a new insight on the distribution of MPs across different environmental matrices in river estuaries, where estuarine benthic sediments were identified as a potential important sink for MPs.