T
Thomas M. Church
Researcher at University of Delaware
Publications - 138
Citations - 11439
Thomas M. Church is an academic researcher from University of Delaware. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salt marsh & Deposition (aerosol physics). The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 138 publications receiving 10835 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas M. Church include Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The atmospheric input of trace species to the world ocean
Robert A. Duce,Peter S. Liss,John T. Merrill,Elliot Atlas,Patrick Buat-Ménard,B. B. Hicks,John M. Miller,Joseph M. Prospero,Richard Arimoto,Thomas M. Church,W. G. Ellis,James N. Galloway,LeRoy Hansen,Tim Jickells,Anthony H. Knap,K. H. Reinhardt,B. Schneider,A. Soudine,J. J. Tokos,S. Tsunogai,R. Wollast,M. Y. Zhou +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess current data in this area, develop global scale estimates of the atmospheric fluxes of trace elements, mineral aerosol, nitrogen species, and synthetic organic compounds to the ocean; and compare the atmospheric input rates of these substances to their input via rivers.
Book ChapterDOI
The fate of nitrogen and phosphorus at the land-sea margin of the North Atlantic Ocean
S. W. Nixon,James W. Ammerman,Larry P. Atkinson,V. M. Berounsky,Gilles Billen,William C. Boicourt,Walter R. Boynton,Thomas M. Church,D. M. Ditoro,Ragnar Elmgren,J. H. Garber,Anne E. Giblin,R. A. Jahnke,Nicholas J. P. Owens,Michael E. Q. Pilson,Sybil P. Seitzinger +15 more
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the effective transport of active N and P from land to the shelf through very large rivers is reduced to 292 · 109 moles y-1 of N and 13 · 109moles y -1 of P.
Book ChapterDOI
Atmospheric deposition of nutrients to the North Atlantic Basin.
Joseph M. Prospero,K. J. Barrett,Thomas M. Church,Frank Dentener,Robert A. Duce,James N. Galloway,Hiram Levy,Jennie L. Moody,Patricia K. Quinn +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, atmospheric chemical models are used to estimate the deposition rate of various inorganic oxides of nitrogen (NOy), reduced nitrogen species (NHx), and mineral dust to the North Atlantic Ocean (NAO).
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of anthropogenic combustion emissions on the fractional solubility of aerosol iron: Evidence from the Sargasso Sea
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported empirical estimates of the fractional solubility of aerosol iron over the Sargasso Sea during periods characterized by high concentrations of Saharan dust (summer 2003) and by low concentrations of aerosols in North American/maritime North Atlantic air masses (spring 2004 and early summer 2004).
Journal ArticleDOI
An underground route for the water cycle
TL;DR: Water flows from the land to the sea in rivers -that is the classroom picture that seems too self-evident to question as mentioned in this paper. But there is evidence that a comparable amount may flow underground directly into coastal waters.