Institution
Memorial University of Newfoundland
Education•St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada•
About: Memorial University of Newfoundland is a education organization based out in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gadus. The organization has 13818 authors who have published 27785 publications receiving 743594 citations. The organization is also known as: Memorial University & Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Topics: Population, Gadus, Health care, Poison control, Atlantic cod
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Borage meal exerted a concentration-dependent antioxidant activity in a meat model system, and the resulting extract inhibited 2-thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), hexanal and total volatile formation in meat by 26.5, 30.5 and 18.6%, respectively.
249 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors dealt with quasilinear reaction-diffusion equations for which a solution local in time exists and the problem of determining whether the solution ceases to exist for some finite time is studied.
249 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that ozone production occurs at lower NOx and much larger VOC concentrations than does its summertime urban counterpart, leading to carbonyl (oxygenated VOCs with a C = O moiety) photolysis as a dominant oxidant source.
Abstract: Data from the oil- and gas-producing basin of northeastern Utah and a box model are used to assess the photochemical reactions of nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds that lead to excessive atmospheric ozone pollution in winter. The US experience with air quality degradation from shale gas extraction presents a measurement and modelling framework relevant to similar developments in other regions projected for the near future. High ozone mixing ratios have been observed in oil and gas producing basins in the United States during winter, but the underlying chemistry involved is not fully understood. This study presents a quantitative assessment of the underlying chemistry responsible for the winter ozone pollution events based on data from an oil and gas basin in Utah and a chemical 'box model' simulation. The results show that very high volatile organic carbon concentrations optimize the ozone production efficiency of nitrogen oxides with carbonyl photolysis as a dominant oxidant source. The United States is now experiencing the most rapid expansion in oil and gas production in four decades, owing in large part to implementation of new extraction technologies such as horizontal drilling combined with hydraulic fracturing. The environmental impacts of this development, from its effect on water quality1 to the influence of increased methane leakage on climate2, have been a matter of intense debate. Air quality impacts are associated with emissions of nitrogen oxides3,4 (NOx = NO + NO2) and volatile organic compounds5,6,7 (VOCs), whose photochemistry leads to production of ozone, a secondary pollutant with negative health effects8. Recent observations in oil- and gas-producing basins in the western United States have identified ozone mixing ratios well in excess of present air quality standards, but only during winter9,10,11,12,13. Understanding winter ozone production in these regions is scientifically challenging. It occurs during cold periods of snow cover when meteorological inversions concentrate air pollutants from oil and gas activities, but when solar irradiance and absolute humidity, which are both required to initiate conventional photochemistry essential for ozone production, are at a minimum. Here, using data from a remote location in the oil and gas basin of northeastern Utah and a box model, we provide a quantitative assessment of the photochemistry that leads to these extreme winter ozone pollution events, and identify key factors that control ozone production in this unique environment. We find that ozone production occurs at lower NOx and much larger VOC concentrations than does its summertime urban counterpart, leading to carbonyl (oxygenated VOCs with a C = O moiety) photolysis as a dominant oxidant source. Extreme VOC concentrations optimize the ozone production efficiency of NOx. There is considerable potential for global growth in oil and gas extraction from shale. This analysis could help inform strategies to monitor and mitigate air quality impacts and provide broader insight into the response of winter ozone to primary pollutants.
248 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a series of sand-prone deposits are identified beneath an uppermost (Holocene) transparent mud drape in the Dardanelles, and the sandy deposits thicken into mounds with the morphology and cross-sectional geometries of barrier islands, sand waves, and current-generated marine bars.
247 citations
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TL;DR: By Liapunov functions/functionals, sufficient conditions are obtained for general exponential stability, while by using a comparison result from the theory of monotone dynamical systems, componentwise exponential stability is discussed.
247 citations
Authors
Showing all 13990 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Daniel Levy | 212 | 933 | 194778 |
Rakesh K. Jain | 200 | 1467 | 177727 |
Peter W.F. Wilson | 181 | 680 | 139852 |
Martin G. Larson | 171 | 620 | 117708 |
Peter B. Jones | 145 | 1857 | 94641 |
Dafna D. Gladman | 129 | 1036 | 75273 |
Guoyao Wu | 122 | 764 | 56270 |
Fereidoon Shahidi | 119 | 951 | 57796 |
David Harvey | 115 | 738 | 94678 |
Robert C. Haddon | 112 | 577 | 52712 |
Se-Kwon Kim | 102 | 763 | 39344 |
John E. Dowling | 94 | 305 | 28116 |
Mark J. Sarnak | 94 | 393 | 42485 |
William T. Greenough | 93 | 200 | 29230 |
Soottawat Benjakul | 92 | 891 | 34336 |