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Return to Home Page Issue #23 11 April 2008   

EDITORS

Chief Editor: Kostas Kourtidis
Laboratory of Atmospheric Pollution
and Pollution Control Engineering of Atmospheric Pollutants
Department of Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering
Demokritus University of Thrace
Postal address: Vas. Sofias 12, GR-67100 Xanthi, Greece
Courier address: GR-67100 Kimeria-Xanthi, Greece
tel. +30-25410-79383, fax. +30-25410-79379

email: kourtidis@the-eggs.org

Assistant Editor: Magdeline Pokar
Bristol Glaciology Center,
School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol
University Road
Bristol, BS8 1SS, United Kingdom
tel. +44(0)117 928 8186, fax. +44(0)117 928 7878

email: M.Pokar@bristol.ac.uk

Hydrological Sciences: Guenther Bloeschl
Institut fur Hydraulik, Gewasserkunde und Wasserwirtschaft
Technische Universitat Wien Karlsplatz 13/223,
A-1040 Wien, Austria
tel. +43-1-58801-22315, fax. +43-1-58801-22399

email: bloeschl@hydro.tuwien.ac.at

Biogeosciences: Jean-Pierre Gattuso
Laboratoire d'Oceanographie de Villefranche, UMR 7093 CNRS-UPMC
B. P. 28, F-06234 Villefranche-sur-mer Cedex France
tel. +33-(0)493763859, fax. +33-(0)493763834

email: gattuso@obs-vlfr.fr

Geodynamics: Bert L.A. Vermeersen
Delft University of Technology DEOS - Fac. Aerospace Engineering Astrodynamics and Satellite Systems Kluyverweg 1, NL-2629 HS Delft The Netherlands
tel. +31-15-2788272 fax. +31-15-2785322 8

e-mail: B.Vermeersen@lr.tudelft.nl

Atmospheric Sciences: Hans Xiang-Yu Huang
Danish Meteorological Institute, Lyngbyvej 100, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
tel. +45-39157423, fax. +45-39157460

e-mail: xyh@dmi.dk

Seismology: Marco Mucciarelli
Universita della Basilicata Di.S.G.G
Campus Macchia Romana, 85100 Potenza Italy
tel. (39) 0971-205094, fax. (39) 0971-205070

e-mail: mucciarelli@unibas.it

Climate: Yu Shaocai
Atmospheric Sciences Modeling Division (E243-01), National Exposure Research Laboratory U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
RTP, NC 27711, USA
tel. +1-919-541-0362, fax. +1-919-541-1379

e-mail: yu.shaocai@epamail.epa.gov

Atmospheric Chemistry: Kostas Kourtidis
Laboratory of Atmospheric Pollution
and Pollution Control Engineering of Atmospheric Pollutants
Department of Environmental Engineering,
School of Engineering, Demokritus University of Thrace
Postal address: Vas. Sofias 12, GR-67100 Xanthi, Greece
Courier address: GR-67100 Kimeria-Xanthi, Greece
tel. +30-25410-79383, fax. +30-25410-79379

e-mail: kourtidis@env.duth.gr

GENERAL CONTACT
For general matters please contact Kostas Kourtidis,
at: kourtidis@the-eggs.org

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Issue Navigation



SCOR and GESAMP Position

To be scientifically credible the design and implementation of large-scale nutrient addition experiments must be transparent and the results must be clearly stated and made available to the scientific community and the general public. Carbon credits for fertilization should not be allowed unless and until reliable methods have been developed to estimate and verify the amount of carbon actually sequestered, and side effects have been properly understood and taken into account. It is essential that each stage of these experiments is reviewed by well-qualified experts free of vested interests. The goal of any new experiment on the effects of nutrient addition should be to increase our understanding of ocean processes at adequate spatial and temporal resolution. ... click for more...

 
A grave in the Magellan strait

To almost everyone, the name H.M.S. Beagle is invariably connected to the Charles Darwin. But Darwin's voyage was the second voyage of the Beagle, not the first. The first mission of beagle was to participate in a hydrographical survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, accompanying the larger 380 ton ship, Adventure. The Beagle sailed from Plymouth on May 22, 1826. ... click for more...

 
Heat and Energy pollution

Many human activities are heat producing, from industrial processes to household activities and urban lifestyles in general including all forms of transportation, and, of course, any use of energy irrespective of its source which deposits waste heat in the environment. It is essential to develop strategies to capture waste heat before it is emitted into the atmosphere where it contributes to the urban and global warming effect. ... click for more...

 
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