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Jost Eikenberg

Researcher at Paul Scherrer Institute

Publications -  59
Citations -  2155

Jost Eikenberg is an academic researcher from Paul Scherrer Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion (business) & Sorption. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1973 citations.

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Mass loss on Himalayan glacier endangers water resources

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors collected in 2006 from Naimona'nyi Glacier in the Himalaya (Tibet) lack these distinctive marker horizons suggesting no net accumulation of mass (ice) since at least 1950.
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Rare earth elements and Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of dissolved and suspended loads from small river systems in the Vosges mountains (France), the river Rhine and groundwater

TL;DR: In this paper, the evolution of rare earth elements (REE) in non-mature streams from small catchment areas in the Vosges mountains downstream to more mature plain rivers including the river Rhine was studied.
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Pinpointing the Source of a Lunar Meteorite: Implications for the Evolution of the Moon

TL;DR: The isotope systematics of the meteorite record four lunar impact events at 3909 ± 13 million years ago, ∼2800 Ma, ∼200 Ma, and <0.34 Ma, which can be linked to the collision with Earth sometime after 9.7 ± 1.3 thousand years ago.
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Results of the colloid and radionuclide retention experiment (crr) at the grimsel test site (gts), switzerland - impact of reaction kinetics and speciation on radionuclide migration

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of smectite colloids on the migration behavior of U(VI), Th(IV), Pu([V), Am(III), Np(V), Sr(II) and Cs(I) is investigated within the Colloid and Radionuclide Retardation experiment (CRR).
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Long-term diffusion experiment at Mont Terri: first results from field and laboratory data

TL;DR: In this paper, a long-term diffusion experiment, termed DI-A, is carried out at the Mont Terri Rock Laboratory in the Opalinus Clay formation, which is the understanding of the migration and sorption behavior of cationic and anionic species in consolidated clays.