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Julie K. Shoemaker

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  8
Citations -  645

Julie K. Shoemaker is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Global warming & Greenhouse gas. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 558 citations. Previous affiliations of Julie K. Shoemaker include Lesley University.

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Anthropogenic influences on groundwater arsenic concentrations in Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this paper, a typical site in Bangladesh, where groundwater-irrigated rice fields and constructed ponds are the main sources of groundwater recharge, combine hydrologic and biogeochemical analyses to trace the origin of contaminated groundwater.
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What Role for Short-Lived Climate Pollutants in Mitigation Policy?

TL;DR: An emerging strategy, which is referred to as hybrid climate mitigation (HCM), emphasizes reducing SLCPs in parallel with long-lived carbon dioxide (CO2) so as to achieve climate goals, as well as health and food security benefits, associated with some of the S LCPs.
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Forest ecosystem changes from annual methane source to sink depending on late summer water balance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed whole-ecosystem CH4 fluxes from 2 years, obtained over a lowland evergreen forest in Maine, USA, and found that gross primary productivity provided the strongest correlation with CH4, with an additional significant effect of soil moisture in the second drier year.
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Subsurface characterization of methane production and oxidation from a New Hampshire wetland.

TL;DR: The carbon isotopic composition of pore water carbon dioxide from Sallie's Fen, a New Hampshire poor fen, is measured to suggest that much of the methane produced during this time comes either from the unsaturated peat, or from the top 1-3 cm of saturated peat where episodic exchange with the atmosphere makes it invisible to the method.
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Six years of ecosystem-atmosphere greenhouse gas fluxes measured in a sub-boreal forest.

TL;DR: Continuous tower-based measurements of the ecosystem-atmosphere exchange of CO2 and CH4 are presented, recorded over the period 2012–2018 and reported at a 30-minute time step, for regional-to-global upscaling and budgeting analyses.