R
Rolf D. Vogt
Researcher at University of Oslo
Publications - 134
Citations - 5625
Rolf D. Vogt is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Water quality. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 128 publications receiving 4830 citations. Previous affiliations of Rolf D. Vogt include Humboldt University of Berlin & Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Modelling streamwater chemistry as a mixture of soilwater end-members — A step towards second-generation acidification models
TL;DR: In this article, a technique is developed whereby stream water can be predicted as a mixture of the observed soilwater classes or end-members, provided that a sufficient set of endmembers has been identified, a least squares technique can be used to estimate the contribution to the stream from each end-member, whenever streamwater samples have been taken.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acid rain in China.
Thorjørn Larssen,Espen Lydersen,Dagang Tang,Yi He,Jixi Gao,Hai-Ying Liu,Lei Duan,Hans Martin Seip,Rolf D. Vogt,Jan Mulder,Min Shao,Yanhui Wang,He Shang,Xiaoshan Zhang,Svein Solberg,Wenche Aas,Tonje Økland,Odd Eilertsen,V. Angell,Quanru Li,Dawei Zhao,Renjun Xiang,Jinshong Xiao,Jiahai Luo +23 more
TL;DR: The current situation and what to expect in the future of acid rain in China are presented, largely on the basis of results from a five-year Chinese-Norwegian cooperative project.
Journal ArticleDOI
In inland China, rice, rather than fish, is the major pathway for methylmercury exposure.
TL;DR: It is found that rice consumption is by far the most important MeHg exposure route in populations in inland China; however, most of the residents (except those in Hg-mining areas) have low PDIs of MeHG.
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Biochar amendment to soil changes dissolved organic matter content and composition
Andreas Botnen Smebye,Andreas Botnen Smebye,Vanja Alling,Rolf D. Vogt,Tone Charlotte Gadmar,Jan Mulder,Gerard Cornelissen,Sarah E. Hale +7 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that biochar could increase the leaching of DOM from soil, as well as change the DOM composition towards molecules with a larger size and higher aromaticity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acid deposition and its effects in China: an overview
Thorjørn Larssen,Hans Martin Seip,Arne Semb,Jan Mulder,Ivar P. Muniz,Rolf D. Vogt,Espen Lydersen,V. Angell,Tang Dagang,Odd Eilertsen +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the acidification of soil and soil water has occurred in the past few decades, which has probably caused elevated concentrations of toxic aluminum in soil water, and the toxic effect of Al is likely to be counteracted by high concentrations of calcium at many places.