J
Josef Veselý
Researcher at University of Maine
Publications - 19
Citations - 1226
Josef Veselý is an academic researcher from University of Maine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Preboreal. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 19 publications receiving 1179 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Recovery from acidification in European surface waters
Chris D. Evans,J. M. Cullen,Christine Alewell,Jiří Kopáček,Aldo Marchetto,Filip Moldan,Annette Prechtel,Michela Rogora,Josef Veselý,Richard F. Wright +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, water quality data for 56 long-term monitoring sites in eight European countries are used to assess freshwater responses to reductions in acid deposition at a large spatial scale, and a consistent analysis of trends from 1980 onwards, the majority of surface waters (38 of 56) showed significant (p ≤ 0.05) decreasing trends in pollution-derived sulphate.
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Response of sulphur dynamics in European catchments to decreasing sulphate deposition
Annette Prechtel,Christine Alewell,Martin Armbruster,Jochen Bittersohl,J. M. Cullen,Chris D. Evans,Rachel Helliwell,Jiri Kopacek,Aldo Marchetto,Egbert Matzner,Henning Meesenburg,Filip Moldan,K. Moritz,Josef Veselý,Richard F. Wright +14 more
TL;DR: In this article, long-term trends in sulphate concentrations and fluxes in precipitation/throughfall and freshwaters of 20 European catchments were analysed to evaluate catchment response to decreasing sulphate deposition.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sulfur and nitrogen emissions in the Czech Republic and Slovakia from 1850 till 2000
Jiří Kopáček,Josef Veselý +1 more
TL;DR: The respective rates of SO2, NOx, and NH3 anthropogenic emissions in the former Czechoslovakia (the Czech Republic and Slovakia (CS)) were investigated in this paper.
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Sulphur and nitrogen fluxes and budgets in the Bohemian Forest and Tatra Mountains during the Industrial Revolution (1850-2000)
TL;DR: In this article, major fluxes of sulphur and dissolved inorganic nitrogen were estimated in Central European mountain ecosystems of the Bohemian Forest (forest lakes) and Tatra Mountains (alpine lakes) over the industrial period.
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Modelling reversibility of Central European mountain lakes from acidification: Part I - the Bohemian forest
TL;DR: In this paper, a dynamic, process-based acidification model, MAGIC7, has been applied to three small, strongly acidified lakes in the Bohemian Forest, the Czech Republic, and produced hindcast concentrations that compared well with older (40-year) irregular determinations of nitrate, chloride and pH.