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Chemical Oceanography and the Marine Carbon Cycle

Chemical Oceanography and the Marine Carbon Cycle

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Steven Emerson, John Hedges
Cambridge University Press, 4/24/2008
EAN 9780521833134, ISBN10: 0521833132

Hardcover, 462 pages, 24.9 x 19.3 x 2.8 cm
Language: English

The principles of chemical oceanography provide insight into the processes regulating the marine carbon cycle. The text offers a background in chemical oceanography and a description of how chemical elements in seawater and ocean sediments are used as tracers of physical, biological, chemical and geological processes in the ocean. The first seven chapters present basic topics of thermodynamics, isotope systematics and carbonate chemistry, and explain the influence of life on ocean chemistry and how it has evolved in the recent (glacial-interglacial) past. This is followed by topics essential to understanding the carbon cycle, including organic geochemistry, air-sea gas exchange, diffusion and reaction kinetics, the marine and atmosphere carbon cycle and diagenesis in marine sediments. Figures are available to download from www.cambridge.org/9780521833134. Ideal as a textbook for upper-level undergraduates and graduates in oceanography, environmental chemistry, geochemistry and earth science and a valuable reference for researchers in oceanography.

Preface
Acknowledgements
Part I. Introduction to Chemical Oceanography
1. Oceanography background
2. Geochemical mass balance
3. Thermodynamics background
4. Carbonate chemistry
5. Stable and radioactive isotopes
6. Life processes in the ocean
7. Paleoceanography and paleoclimatology
Part II. Advanced Topics in Marine Geochemistry
8. Marine organic geochemistry
9. Molecular diffusion and reaction rates
10. Gases and air – water exchange
11. The global carbon cycle
12. Chemical reactions in marine sediments
References
Index.

'... This book will make an excellent primary text for an upper level or graduate chemical oceanography course as well as an excellent reference for the advanced enthusiast. ... The careful presentation of important oceanographic 'problems' interspersed with the necessary review of pure chemistry, biology, and earth science makes this book appropriate for a very broad audience. It is a much-needed addition to the tools for teaching chemical oceanography at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.' Timothy Shaw, Professor of Chemistry, University of South Carolina