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Munir H. Shah

Researcher at Quaid-i-Azam University

Publications -  117
Citations -  3555

Munir H. Shah is an academic researcher from Quaid-i-Azam University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 104 publications receiving 2879 citations.

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Distribution, correlation and risk assessment of selected metals in urban soils from Islamabad, Pakistan.

TL;DR: Overall, considerable degree of contamination was observed in both seasons, although it was higher in winter, and significant anthropogenic intrusions of Cd, Pb, Co, Cr, Cu, Li, Zn and Na in the soils were revealed.
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Ethnobotanical appraisal and cultural values of medicinally important wild edible vegetables of Lesser Himalayas-Pakistan

TL;DR: Patterns of wild edible plant usage depend mainly on socio-economic factors compare to climatic conditions or wealth of flora but during past few decades have harshly eroded due to change in the life style of the inhabitants.
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Geochemical speciation, anthropogenic contamination, risk assessment and source identification of selected metals in freshwater sediments—A case study from Mangla Lake, Pakistan

TL;DR: In this article, a modified BCR sequential extraction procedure was performed in the sediments collected from Mangla Lake, Pakistan using certified reference material (BCR-701) which showed significant recoveries (95-106%).
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Multivariate analysis of trace metal levels in tannery effluents in relation to soil and water: a case study from Peshawar, Pakistan.

TL;DR: The source identification studies conducted using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Cluster Analysis evidenced that ground water and soil were being contaminated by the toxic metals emanating from the tannery effluents.
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Multivariate analysis of trace metals in textile effluents in relation to soil and groundwater.

TL;DR: The correlation study along with linear regression and PCA supported the fact that various elevated metal concentrations emerged from the textile industrial effluents ultimately leading to contamination of the soil and groundwater in their proximity.